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JACKSON JR.

QUITS POST
The Dallas School Board
unanimously accepted
the resignation of boys
basketball coach Ted
Jackson Jr. on Monday
night, just four days be-
fore the official start of
practice. Jackson Jr.
handed in his resignation
on Saturday. Jackson Jr.
didnt attend the meeting
and didnt return a mess-
age left for him Monday
night. Jackson Jr. is also
an assistant football
coach at the school under
his father, Ted Jackson.
Sports,
1B
SPORTS
SHOWCASE
NHL
FLYERS 5
HURRICANES 3
COLLEGE
BASKEBALL
PENN STATE 62
RADFORD 46
SYRACUSE 95
MANHATTAN 56
MICHIGAN 64
TOWNSON 47
UCONN 78
WAGNER 66
C M Y K
6 09815 10011
WILKES-BARRE, PA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 50
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Speaker of the House Boehner,
Rep. Barletta tour Bloomsburg.
NEWS, 3A
Assessing the
storm damage
Area group striving to build
a bicycle community
HEALTH, 1C
Pedaling to a
heathier region
INSIDE
A NEWS: Local 3A
Nation & World 5A
Obituaries 10A
Editorial 13A
B SPORTS: Scoreboard 2B
Business 7B
C HEALTH: Birthdays 4C
Crossword 5C
TV/Movies 6C
D CLASSIFIED: Funnies 12D
WEATHER
Jack Swiderski
Showers, fog, warm
High 61, Low 54
Details, Page 8B
NEWYORKAformer Penn
State football assistant coach
charged with sexually abusing
eight boys in a scandal that has
rocked the university said Mon-
day that there was no abuse and
that any activities in a campus
shower with a boy were just
horseplay, not molestation.
In a telephone interview
scheduled to be aired Monday
night on NBC
News Rock
Center, Bob
Costas asked
Jerry Sandusky
if hes a pedo-
phile and Sand-
usky respon-
ded, No.
Sandusky, once considered
veteran coach Joe Paternos heir
apparent, was arrested more
than a week ago and is charged
withsexually abusing eight boys,
some on Penn State property,
over a 15-year span.
I am innocent of those charg-
es, the 67-year-old Sandusky
said. ... I could say that I have
done some of those things. I have
horsed around with kids. I have
showered after workouts. I have
huggedthem, andI have touched
their legs without intent of sex-
ual contact.
Asked if there was anything he
did do wrong, Sandusky said, I
shouldnt have showered with
those kids.
Athletic director Tim Curley
and Penn State vice president
Gary Schultz are charged with
perjury but maintain their inno-
cence. Paterno and president
Sandusky denies sex abuse in interview
Former Penn State assistant
coach tells NBC that any
activities were just horseplay.
By The Associated Press
Sandusky
President of The
Second Mile char-
ity resigns,
Page 14A
Conflict regard-
ing district judge
who set Sand-
uskys bail,
Page 14A
Big Ten drops
Paternos name
from trophy,
Page 1B
MORE
I NSI DE
See SANDUSKY, Page 14A
After eight months of back and forth be-
tween Luzerne County, Wilkes-Barre and its
one-time champion, the Hotel Sterlings fate
has been decided.
County Commissioners planto vote Thurs-
daytoallocate$1millionincommunitydevel-
opment funding to demolish the historic
downtownlandmark, sayingits their only op-
tion.
Commissioner Maryanne Petrilla said dur-
ing Mondays work session that she does not
believe commissioners have a choice because
the structure has been condemned by Wilkes-
Barre City.
Roadclosures aroundthe building at North
River and Market streets have caused traffic
jams, and snow
would likely
cause additional
damage, she
said.
The buildings
nonprofit owner,
CityVest, first
disclosed the
possibility of
demolition in
March, saying it
was unable to
find a private in-
vestor to develop
and renovate the
deteriorating
structure into a
residential and
retail or office complex.
CityVest representatives asked the county
totake control of the project inApril, sayingit
was out of funds and couldnt come up with
the estimated $26.8 million to $35.6 million
to fully restore the 113-year-old building.
The county has a stake in the more than 3-
acre parcel because it loaned CityVest $6 mil-
lion, which was largely spent to demolish an
attached 14-story high-rise, clean up environ-
mental hazards and acquire two adjoining
land parcels.
The county will take ownershipof the prop-
erty after demolition in an attempt to eventu-
ally reclaimsome or all of its money downthe
road, said county Community Development
Director Andrew Reilly.
The hotel will be demolished in January or
February, andthe incominghome rule county
government administration will decide how
to market the parcel, he said. County officials
have described the site as a premier location
facing the Market Street Bridge and re-
vamped River Common park along the Sus-
L ANDMARK HOTEL
County
to fund
razing of
Sterling
Commissioners plan to allocate $1 million
in community development funding.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
Luzerne County Commis-
sioners will meet at 1 p.m.
Thursday in the commis-
sioners meeting room at
the county courthouse in
Wilkes-Barre.
WHAT S NEXT
See STERLING, Page 8A
Kingston police have a person of inter-
est in custody in connection with a rob-
bery at the Family Dollar onMonday who
maybelinkedtothreeotherarearobberies
onMondaymorning.
Itremainsunknowniftheman, whowas
senttoLuzerneCountyCorrectionalFacil-
ity ona probationviolationMonday after-
noon and whose name police did not re-
lease, is connected to a Sunday night rob-
beryat TacoBell inWilkes-Barre.
Awhite man in his 20s wearing a hood-
ed sweatshirt held up the McDonalds on
KidderStreet, Wilkes-Barre; DollarGener-
al onDallas Memorial Highway, Kingston
Township; FamilyDollar onUnionStreet,
Pringle; and the Uni-Mart on North Main
Street, Plains Township, inless thanthree
hours Mondaymorning.
Amanfitting the same descriptionalso
held up the Taco Bell on Kidder Street at
about 7:36p.m. Sunday.
Police said the man claimed he had a
gun but no firearm had been shown, al-
thoughthemandiddisplayacanof pepper
spray. A knife was displayed in the Uni-
Mart robbery, Plains Township police Lt.
RichardLussi said.
Policemayhavegottenabreakinthein-
vestigations, as a surveillance camera in
FamilyDollar recordedthesuspect.
We got really good quality video, said
Kingston Assistant Police Chief Daniel
Hunsinger.
Hunsinger said the suspect entered the
store in the Luzerne Shopping Plaza just
before10a.m. anddemandedmoneyfrom
a cashier. He walkedinthe store as a nor-
mal customer and he did pick up items to
look at, Hunsinger said. When he goes
Four businesses hit Monday morning by suspect claiming to have gun
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Kingston and Kingston Township police and a member of the Luzerne County Sheriffs Department walk outside the
Family Dollar Store in Pringle that was robbed Monday morning.
Man held in Pringle robbery
By EDWARD LEWIS
elewis@timesleader.com
See ROBBERY, Page 8A
Police said the man did display a can
of pepper spray. A knife was displayed
in the Uni-Mart robbery, Plains Town-
ship police Lt. Richard Lussi said.
WILKES-BARRE Its been 40
years since the Cannonball Run
streaked across America, orga-
nized by automotive anarchists
out to prove that competent driv-
ers could safely exceed posted
speed limits they found oppres-
sive.
OnNov. 15, 1971, eight compet-
itors put the pedal to the metal in
New York City. One of the en-
trants was a modified 1971 Chev-
rolet van operated by three mem-
bers of the Polish Race Drivers of
America. One of those PRDA
team members was Oscar Kova-
leski of Clarks Summit.
Id like to forget it, is howKo-
valeski recalled his experience. I
dont ever want to see young peo-
ple go out and do that again.
Kovaleski, Tony Adamowicz
and Brad Niemcek came in sec-
ond in the near-3,000 mile race.
They finished 53 minutes behind
a Ferrari driven in shifts by pro-
fessional race driver Dan Gurney
and automotive journalist Brock
Yates. The Ferraris time was 35
The race of a lifetime ago
SUBMITTED PHOTO/OSCAR KOVALESKI
The Polish
Race Driv-
ers of
America
pose with
their van
fromthe
1971 Can-
nonball
Run. From
left: Brad
Niemcek,
Oscar Ko-
valeski and
Tony Ada-
mowicz.
See RUN, Page 8A
Oscar Kovaleski of Clarks
Summit part of original
Cannonball Run in 1971.
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
K
PAGE 2A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Blaum, Francis
Finiak, Michael
Hafferty, John
Hurrey, John
Kehoe, Theresa
May, Charles
Mazuka, Joseph
McHugh, Sarah
Navalany, Edwin
Peterlin, Nicholas Sr.
Podolsky, Linda
Stolpe, Marjorie
Turner, Judith
Wanat, Anna
Welch, Jean
Whitlock, Lois
Winslow, Leroy
OBITUARIES
Page 10A
BUILDING
TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories
and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in this
spot. If you have information
to help us correct an inaccu-
racy or cover an issue more
thoroughly, call the newsroom
at 829-7242.
HARRISBURG No player
matched all five winning
numbers drawn in Mondays
Pennsylvania Cash 5 game
so the jackpot will be worth
$225,000.
Lottery officials said 78
players matched four num-
bers and won $179 each and
2,563 players matched
three numbers and won $9
each.
Thursdays Pennsylvania
Match 6 Lotto jackpot will
be worth at least $800,000
because no player holds a
ticket with one row that
matches all six winning
numbers drawn in Mondays
game.
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 8-1-9
BIG FOUR 9-3-2-5
QUINTO 8-9-8-3-1
TREASURE HUNT
01-03-20-22-28
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 7-8-2
BIG FOUR 7-6-4-9
QUINTO 7-4-4-5-8
CASH FIVE
03-12-14-17-32
MATCH SIX
01-10-14-20-40-47
DETAILS
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Issue No. 2011-319
WASHINGTON The Su-
preme Court said Monday it will
consider a challenge to the Oba-
ma administrations health care
law next year, setting the stage
for a legal and political blockbus-
ter.
Surprising no one, but excit-
ing many, the justices agreed to
hear the claim by Florida and 25
other states that the health care
lawviolates the Constitution. An
unusually long four-and-a-half
oral argument in the spring is
likely to be followed by a deci-
sion in late June, in the heat of
campaign season.
Its a very big deal, said Gary
Jacobson, professor of politics at
the University of California at
San Diego. Health care is the
centerpiece of the Obama ad-
ministration agenda.
The courts nine justices fol-
lowed their usual practice Mon-
day in not commenting upon
their decision to hear the health
care case. At least four of the jus-
tices had to agree to hear the
case during a closed-door ses-
sion held last Thursday.
The court did, though, specify
that it will consider the primary
question of whether Congress
went beyond its constitutional
authority when it included the
individual mandate in the Pa-
tient Protection and Affordable
Care Act.
Under the individual mandate,
nearly all individuals must either
be covered by health insurance
or pay a fee.
The court also said it would
consider whether portions of the
lawmight survive if the individu-
al mandate is struck down. Even
if justices eventually strike down
part of the law, which exceeded
2,400 pages when it passed Con-
gress in 2009, other parts should
remain intact, supporters say.
The court will also be consider-
ing a challenge to the laws ex-
pansion of Medicaid coverage.
The court combined Floridas
challenge with a separate one fil-
ed by the National Federation of
Independent Business, selecting
the cases and arguments to be
heard from among six petitions.
Five petitions were filed by op-
ponents of the law and one was
filed by the Obama administra-
tion. All agreed the court had to
act.
Time is of the essence, at-
torney Paul Clement wrote in a
legal brief for Florida and other
states. States need to know
whether they must adapt their
policies to deal with the brave
new world ushered in by the
(law.)
It also has the potential to be
the centerpiece of the 2012 presi-
dential and congressional cam-
paigns.
The 2010 health care law,
passed after a prolonged, often
ugly partisan struggle, became a
symbol for all conservatives
loathe about big, overreaching
government, and a symbol for
others of how much government
could make a complex health
care system more affordable and
accessible.
The law has been in effect
since March, 2010, and has doz-
ens of provisions.
Supreme Court to mull health challenge
Justices to hear claim by
Florida, 25 other states that
law violates the Constitution.
By MICHAEL DOYLE
and DAVID LIGHTMAN
McClatchy Newspapers
DALLAS TWP. The Dallas
School District presented a draft-
ed mass evacuation plan Monday
that works in conjunction with
the Lake-Lehman School Dis-
trict.
It states if there is a cata-
strophic occurrence on the Dal-
las campus, students will be
transported to Lake-Lehman
schools.
Superintendent Frank Galicki
said he has met with local emer-
gency, police andfire officials and
local transportation companies
about the plan, and it is in its in-
fancy. He said there will be a test
in the future, pending the coordi-
nation of both districts sched-
ules.
Galicki mentioned that he
spoke to the superintendent of
the Forest City Regional School
District in Susquehanna County
for an emergency preparedness
plan in relation to natural gas is-
sues.
In other news, the board heard
a presentationfromRickLeBlanc
of Crabtree Rohrbaugh &Associ-
ates on roofing issues at Dallas
Elementary School.
He said three classrooms have
deflecting roof panels that have
caused the ceiling to sag as much
as six inches in certain areas.
The board approved the pro-
ject, which has an estimated cost
of $15,000. LeBlanc saidhe hopes
to award bids by next month to
complete the repairs during the
Christmas break.
The board approved the sale of
100 lockers from the old Dallas
High School to the Hanover Area
School District at a cost of $12.50
per locker. Business Manager
Grant Palfey said the lockers are
about eight years old, and the
money generated from the sale
will go into the general fund.
Galicki announced those who
were affected by the PSAT fun-
draising scheme headed by for-
mer guidance counselor John
Wolensky may apply for reim-
bursement until the end of this
year.
Wolensky pocketed money
from a fundraiser conducted
from 1997 to 2008 in which stu-
dents were overcharged as much
as $15 for a practice SAT test. He
also took money from student
meal accounts and football hel-
met funds.
Wolensky pleaded guilty to a
theft chargeinFebruary2009and
was sentenced to two years pro-
bation. He admitted to taking
$24,683 and was ordered to pay
restitution to the district for the
misappropriated funds, but a re-
port released last year from the
state auditor generals office con-
tended Wolensky may have taken
more than double that amount.
The money Wolensky paid
back to the district was placed in
an escrow account, and any un-
claimed funds will be used to aid
students who cannot afford to
pay for certain tests.
To make a claim, visit the Dal-
las School District website at
www.dallassd.com.
The boardalso acceptedthe re-
signation of Ted Jackson Jr. as
head boys basketball coach.
Evacuation
plan given
by Dallas
School District will work in
conjunction with Lake-Lehman
School District.
By SARAH HITE
shite@timesleader.com
HAZLE TWP. -- Media cover-
age and its effect on the town-
ship residents was a topic of dis-
cussion at Monday nights Hazle
Township Board of Supervisors
meeting.
Jimmy Montone, a resident of
Birch Road, Oakmont Acres,
said that recent coverage of the
township focused on residents
dissatisfaction with sewage fees,
disregarding positive aspects of
the township such as a 2011bud-
get surplus of $300,000, excel-
lent road maintenance and a
board of supervisors fully sup-
ported by the residents it serves.
This is the best place in the
world to raise a family, said
Montone, saying that negative
press that the township recently
received was unwarranted.
BothMontone andSupervisor
Francis Butchie Boyarski indi-
cated that sewage costs, which
vary across the township, were
the result of an unfunded state
mandate and did not reflect on
any decision of the Hazle Town-
ship Board.
Richard Wienches, of Forest
Hills Acres, addressedthe board,
indicating that he disagreed
with the disparity of sewage
costs, saying that some folks on
the south side are unable to pay
their sewage bills.
Montone countered this was
simply a cost of living in the
township, and that the disparity
was a result of the timing of each
sewage project, with recent pro-
jects costing residents more.
Wienches also questioned So-
licitor Charles Pedris billing in
regard to Right to Know re-
quests, saying Pedri billed the
township $95 for each request
which resulted in a cost of thou-
sands of dollars to the township
per year. Wienches said he had
spoken with representatives
from Hazleton and West Hazle-
ton and that they did not charge
a legal fee in regard to such re-
quests.
It is necessary for such re-
quests to be reviewed in order to
insure that the township avoids
unnecessary lawsuits, said
Montone, better to spend $95
than to defend against a future
lawsuit for thousands of dollars.
I bill at a rate of $95per hour,
said Pedri, often reviewing a
Right to Know request takes on-
ly a few minutes and costs the
township less than $25.
Wienches, who lost his recent
bid to become a supervisor on
the township board, grilled the
supervisors on several issues in-
cluding a possible conflict of in-
terest in that Boyarskis father
served on the vacancy board,
which would seek a replacement
if one of the present supervisors
was unable to serve.
Both Boyarski and his father
adamantly defended them-
selves, saying the senior Boyar-
ski had served in his capacity on
the vacancy board for many
years before his son had become
a supervisor.
The next meeting of the board
of supervisors will come on Dec.
12 and will address the 2012 bud-
get.
Sewers discussed at Hazle Twp.
Residents complain to
supervisors about media
coverage of controversial fee.
By GERI GIBBONS
Times Leader Correspondent
PALO ALTO, Calif. Two
weeks after surgery, twin sisters
who had been joined at the chest
arepreparingtoleavethehospital
eachintheir owncar seat.
Angelica and Angelina Sabuco
have been recovering at Lucile
Packard Childrens Hospital at
Stanford University since their
Nov. 1 operation. The hospital
said Monday that the 2-year-olds
should be able to return to their
San Jose home in the next couple
of days.
Theyarerecoveringvery, very
well, said lead surgeon Dr. Gary
Hartman. Our goal istoreturnas
manychildrenaswecantohappy,
healthy lives.
Hartman said the girls are off
pain medications and their livers
are functioning normally. He will
continueseeingthegirlsforweek-
ly outpatient therapy, and they
will see a plastic surgeon, Dr. Pe-
ter Lorenz, for follow-up proce-
dures. Lorenz saidthe girls chest
walls have a bit of an abnormal
shapebut it canbemoldedasthey
grow.
Angelina andAngelica alsowill
continue physical and occupa-
tional therapy to build up their
strength and develop their motor
skills, the hospital said.
Thesistersmadetheirpost-sur-
gery debut during a news confer-
ence at the hospital Monday.
Wearing bright red dresses
withbowsintheirhairandheldby
their mother and aunt, the girls
appeared at ease with the all the
attention. Their mother, Ginady
Sabuco, smiled and laughed and
urged her daughters to wave and
say hello as they approached re-
porters.
Were so excited now to go
homeandseethemsittingintheir
owncarseats,shesaid. Thegirls
nearly10-hoursurgery, paidforby
thefamilys healthinsurance, was
the second such successful oper-
ationat the hospital inPalo Alto.
Calif. twins
prepared to
return home
The sisters, who had been
joined at the chest, have been
recovering since surgery.
By BROOKE DONALD
Associated Press
SPRUCING UP HISTORY
AP PHOTO
A
rtist Betty
Tiemeyer
touches up a
mural Monday
of the World
War II U.S.
flag-raising on
Iwo Jima at
the Veteran of
Foreign Wars
building in
Dayton, Ky.
This is the
third time she
has touched
up the mural,
which she
originally
painted in
1987.
WASHINGTON Arizona
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, in her
first public interview since she
was shot in the head in Tucson
last winter, doted on her hus-
band, former astronaut Mark
Kelly, and called him brave,
brave, brave as she kissed his
bald head.
Giffords appeared on ABCs
20/20 show Monday night.
Its her first extended interview
since the January rampage that
killed six people and wounded
13.
A segment that aired on
Good Morning America
showed a thin Giffords with a
broad grin as she talks about
Kelly. Her husband replied that
the word brave was the same
one that came tohis mindwhen
he thinks of her brave and
tough, he said. Then Giffords,
looking directly at Kelly, re-
sponds almost in a whisper:
Tough, tough, tough.
It wasnt clear just how fully
recovered Giffords is10 months
after the shooting. Interviewer
Diane Sawyer said Giffords dis-
cusses her career plans and her
recovery, and the segment in-
cluded some video of Giffords
progress, from being unable to
speak at all, to the point where
she was ready to give a televi-
sion interview.
At one point, Giffords breaks
down sobbing while having dif-
ficulty relearning to speak and
sheandher therapist hug. Inan-
other clip, she sings into a mi-
crophone as part of her speech
therapy. And in another she
walks holding hands with her
husband.
The television interview
comes as fellow victims of the
shooting came to Washington
to testify in favor of a gun-con-
trol bill. Theysaidthat Giffords
appearance represents a major
milestone for them as it helps
them cope with the trauma
theyve endured over the past
10 months. About a dozen sur-
vivors and family members are
in Washington lobbying for leg-
islation that would extend
criminal background checks to
all gun sales and enhance the
quality of the FBIs criminal
background checks.
Giffords calls husband brave in first interview
The Arizona congresswoman
speaks 10 months after being
shot in the head in rampage.
By KEVIN FREKING
Associated Press
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE
County looking into storage
Luzerne County Commissioners plan
to negotiate an agreement to buy a
North Washington Street building to
store county records, they said during
Mondays work session.
Commissioners also want to hire an
archivist to make sure records are
properly stored and disseminated, said
county Commissioner Stephen A. Ur-
ban.
The building, which was recom-
mended by the county records im-
provement committee, is owned by
John Williams and previously housed
Two Jacks Cycle & Powersports, Urban
said.
An existing fee on deeds recorded in
the county and money borrowed
through bonds would pay for the pur-
chase and renovation, Urban said. A
final purchase would have to be publi-
cly approved by commissioners, he
said.
County officials explored building a
facility or renovating a leased or pur-
chased building because they want to
get records out of the Thomas C. Tho-
mas building in downtown Wilkes-
Barre, which has been criticized for
temperature extremes, lack of security,
leaks and fire hazards.
EDWARDSVILLE
Kmart will reopen store
The Kmart that closed after flood
damage in September is targeted for a
reopening in the spring, according to a
company spokesman.
Chris Brathwaite said the landlord of
the building, which has been home to
Kmart since 1974, is working to make
repairs to the building and the retailer
is eyeing the spring for a grand reopen-
ing. The Mark Plazas other key tenant,
Redners Warehouse Market, has also
been closed since the Susquehanna
River overflowed its banks.
HARRISBURG
Coalition honors Mundy
The Pennsylvania Public Policy Coa-
lition of the Alzheimers Association on
Monday honored state Rep. Phyllis
Mundy, D-Kingston.
Mundy was honor-
ed for her work seek-
ing to amend Penn-
sylvanias Family Care-
giver Support Act so
that family members
or friends who pro-
vide care, but do not
live with the afflicted
person who receives
the care, would be legally recognized
as caregivers.
The honor was given during the
groups day of advocacy at the State
Capitol.
HARRISBURG
Toohil supports legislation
State Rep. Tarah Toohil, R-Butler
Township, and state Rep. Justin Sim-
mons, R-Lehigh County, on Wednesday
called for the passage of legislation
that would impose stronger penalties
for crimes involving a
child prompted by the
Casey Anthony case in
Florida.
Toohils proposal,
House Bill 1841,
would change the
grading of the offense
from a second- or
third-degree misde-
meanor to a third-degree felony in
situations in which a parent or custo-
dian provides false information to
police in a criminal investigation in-
volving a child.
WILKES-BARRE
Free flu shots are available
The Wilkes-Barre City Health De-
partment will hold a free flu vaccina-
tion clinic for all city residents on Pub-
lic Square on Thursday from10 a.m. to
3 p.m. during the final week of the
Farmers Market.
All city residents must show proof of
residency in order to be eligible for the
free vaccination. The citys public
health preparedness trailer will be
parked on Public Square near the band
shell. For more information, call 208-
4268.
I N B R I E F
LUZERNE COUNTY ASSESSMENT
Former Two Jacks Cycle & Power-
sports
Mundy
Toohil
After more than two hours of de-
bate and discussion about the selec-
tion process for the new Luzerne
County manager, most of the
home rule transition commit-
tee members left the county
courthouse Monday night
with packets of information
about the 72 applicants.
Councilmen-elect Rick Mo-
relli and Stephen J. Urban did
not receive packets because
they refused to sign confidentiality
agreements saying they wouldnt re-
lease the names.
Morelli said he would honor the
decision to keep the names confiden-
tial even though he didnt agree with
it, but he said he wont sign a confi-
dentiality agreement after consulting
withtwoattorneys. He saidhe would
explore legal options to obtain the
packet.
Stephen J. Urban said the
committee decided to enact a
confidentiality agreement be-
fore the 11 new council mem-
bers joined the group, and he
tore up the agreement during
the meeting. He said he will
eventually receive the names,
whether its now or on Jan. 2
whenhes sworninas acouncil mem-
ber.
County Commissioner Stephen A.
Urban, who was also elected to coun-
TRANSI TI ON COMMI TTEE Selection process for new county manager discussed
Members get applicant details
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Luzerne
County
Council-
woman-
elect
Elaine
Maddon
Curry
discusses
the coun-
ty manag-
er selec-
tion proc-
ess during
Mondays
home rule
transition
commit-
tee meet-
ing.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
See MANAGER, Page 8A
SWOYERSVILLE Residents with en-
vironmental and safety concerns are pro-
testing the expansion of Buck Mountain
Quarry/Brdaric Excavating in neighbor-
ing Kingston Township.
John Brdaric Jr., owner of Buck Moun-
tain Quarry, re-filed a permit modifica-
tion earlier this year to expand the
mining operation from 44.8 acres to 89
acres and increase mining depth from
160 feet to 260 feet.
Several attempts toreachBrdaric were
unsuccessful.
Swoyersville res-
ident WilliamConi-
glio began circulat-
ing a petition op-
posing the move
because he said ex-
pansion of the site
would exacerbate
already existing en-
vironmental and
safety concerns.
State Rep. Phyl-
lis Mundy pushed
for a public hearing
on the permit mod-
ification, which
will take place
Thursday afternoon. Mundy saidshe has
touredthe site withrepresentatives from
the Department of Environmental Pro-
tection, and her main concern about the
project was water runoff. The quarry is
onthe southernslope of Bunker Hill, fac-
ing Swoyersville.
The mountainside is creating enor-
mous runoff for towns in the valley, and
DEP is convinced there is no runoff be-
cause of the pits that surround project,
Mundy said. They believe water is
trapped there.
Stephen Nowroski, of Swoyersville,
said recent flooding in the borough is a
rare occurrence and blames the quarry
for causing it.
Imnot against Buck Mountain Quar-
ry doing what they want to do to make
money its beneficial to many people,
he said. Im concerned with the effects
Quarry plan
draws concern
of community
Environmental concerns among the
main reasons residents against
expansion of Buck Mountain Quarry.
By SARAH HITE
shite@timesleader.com
The public hearing
for the Buck
Mountain Quarry/
Brdaric Excavating
permit modifica-
tion will be held
from1 to 3 p.m.
Thursday at the
Kingston Township
municipal building,
180 E. Center St.,
Shavertown.
WHAT S
NEXT
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2
9
1
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3
6
1
0
SWOYERSVILLE
KINGSTON TWP.
QUARRY EXPANSION
Existing quarry
Proposed expansion
309
See QUARRY, Page 8A
BLOOMSBURG The devasta-
tion remains along West Main
Street several condemned proper-
ties that will never be remodeled sit
in waiting as evidence of the dam-
age done by September flood wa-
ters.
U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta, R-Hazle-
ton, and Speaker of the House John
Boehner, R-Ohio, toured the affect-
ed area Monday. They talked with
residents who are waiting for any
news that financial help is on the
way.
The properties front the Blooms-
burg Fairgrounds, which also suf-
fered severe flood damage.
We want to know if the govern-
ment is going to buy us out, said
Keri Gaito, who lived at 932 W.
Main St. with her two children. I
had flood insurance, but my insur-
ance company tells me the damage
to my home was not caused by
flooding; they say it was caused by
erosion around the founda-
tion.
Gaito and her neighbors
were hoping to hear some-
thing positive from Boehner
and Barletta.
Obviously this was a dev-
astating event, Boehner
said. Theres no question
the federal government
needs to respond quickly.
Ive seen devastation like this in
other parts of the country. The fact
is it takes the federal government
far too long to respond.
The flooding occurred on Sept. 8
and 9.
Boehner visited Bloomsburg dur-
ing the 2010 campaign on behalf of
Barletta. He said he remembers the
area and can see the devastation
that the flood waters caused.
I will work with Lou and the vari-
ous federal agencies to get help for
these people, Boehner said.
There are many homeowners and
manufacturers that need help to get
back.
Columbia County Commis-
sioner Chris Young and
Bloomsburg Mayor Dan
Knorr accompanied Boehner
and Barletta, offering infor-
mation about the extent of
the damage and the delay in
getting help for the residents.
I think Speaker Boehner
benefited from his visit to-
day, Young said. What might
make sense in Washington doesnt
make sense in the 900 block of West
Main Street in Bloomsburg.
Valerie Samayoa lived at 924
West Main St. She pointed to her
severely damaged home and said,
Its the blue one over there. The
white house next to it actually was
washed off its foundation and hit
my house.
Samayoa and her husband have
three children. Her house has been
condemned.
We really dont have a lot of hope
for anything at this time, she said.
House Speaker Boehner, Rep. Barletta survey flood damage
DON CAREY /THE TIMES LEADER
Bloomsburg mayor Dan Knorr, left, speaks to Speaker of the House John Boehner and Rep. Lou Barletta about flood
damage as they walk down an alley behind West Main Street in Bloomsburg Monday afternoon.
Congressmen tour Bloomsburg
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
To see video
footage,
visit
www.times
leader.com
WILKES-BARRE Con-
cerned about its pending
abolition once home rule
takes effect, the Luzerne
County prison board on
Mondayaskedits solicitor to
investigate whether the
county is obligated by lawto
retain a separate body to
oversee prison operations.
Controller Walter Griffith,
one of seven members of the
board, said he questions
whether the county manag-
er, who has not yet been ap-
pointed, will be able to over-
see operations of the prison
with the same diligence that
the board has exercised.
The past two years Ive
sat on this board weve done
great work to make every-
one accountable and to keep
the budget down, Griffith
said. Im a little concerned
about the ability of a county
manager to take on the task
of running a prison some-
thing that took seven mem-
bers of this board to do the
past two years.
Commissioner Maryanne
Petrilla, who chairs the pris-
on board, and Warden Jo-
sephPiazza, saidtheyrealso
concerned that the loss of
the board will negatively af-
fect prison operations.
The prison, with a $28
million budget, accounts for
roughly 25 percent of the
countys overall spending.
Thats a lot for a county man-
ager, who will also oversee
numerous other depart-
ments, to take on, Piazza
said.
The prison board now
consists of the controller,
district attorney, a county
judge, the sheriff and three
commissioners. It has oper-
ated under that format since
2009
There are so many issues
involved in operating and
running a prison, Piazza
said. Could one person do
it? Yeah, but because of the
magnitude and amount of
money involved, its always
good to have extra eyes.
County councilman-elect
Rick Morelli said hes aware
of concerns that have been
raisedregardingoversight of
county departments. He
said he plans to suggest the
county council form sub-
committees to assist the
county manager in oversee-
ing the departments.
Griffithsaidhe believes an
independent boardwouldbe
best. He asked the prison
boards solicitor, Stephen
Menn, to look into whether
thereis anystate statute that
requires counties to have a
prison board.
Staff writer Jennifer Learn
Andes contributed to this
story.
Board doubts county manager can handle running prison
By TERRIE
MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
C M Y K
PAGE 4A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
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WILKES-BARRE A Luzerne County jury
was selected Monday to hear the six-year-old
case of a man charged with raping a woman out-
side a city tavern.
A jury of 10 men and four women, which in-
cludes two alternates, was chosen to hear the
case of Daryl Boich, 44, of Church Road, Moun-
tain Top, who faces charges of rape and involun-
tarydeviatesexual intercourseandtwocountsof
sexual assault during this weeks trial.
The trial will begin this morning.
The case had been delayed a number of years
becauseof appeals inboththestateSuperior and
Supreme courts regarding a psychiatric examin-
ation of the victim in the case.
Boichs former attorney, Al Flora, had sought
an examination of the woman Boich is charged
with raping, after she testified at a preliminary
hearingshecouldnot recall variousdetailsof her
activities on the night of the alleged assault.
Flora argued the testing was needed to deter-
mine if she was competent to testify.
The District Attorneys Office opposed the
testing, arguing it was a thinly veiled attempt to
attack the womans credibility. State law pre-
cludes the introduction of expert testimony re-
garding a persons credibility.
Both high courts decided not to hear an ap-
peal, making way for this weeks trial.
Assistant District Attorney Nancy Violi is
prosecuting the case. Boich is represented by at-
torney Todd Henry.
According to court papers, on Oct. 14, 2005,
the woman told police that Boich forced her to
perform a sex act before raping her in the park-
ing lot of the former Murrays Inn in Wilkes-
Barre.
Police said Boich met the woman at the bar
and promised to give her a ride home.
Instead, policesaid, Boichdroveher aroundto
therear of theSouthPennsylvaniaAvenuebuild-
ing and kissed her.
The woman said she wanted to leave, but
Boich drove to a more secluded area and forced
her to perform oral sex on him.
After indicatingshe didnt want todothat, the
womantoldpolice, Boichforcedheretoperform
the act, and then opened his car door, pulled the
woman outside and raped her.
Thewomansaidshethengot backintoBoichs
vehicleandtookacall fromoneof her friendstry-
ing to find her. The woman said she didnt know
where she was and Boich slapped her.
The woman said she left the car and walked
around until she found one of her friends. She
was treated at a local hospital, court papers say.
Jury selected
in rape case
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE A Luzerne
Countysenior judgesaidMondayhell
soonrule whether a psychiatric report
shouldbethrownout, andthepsychia-
trist prohibited from testifying fur-
ther, inthe homicide case against a17-
year-old.
Senior Judge Joseph Augello heard
arguments from Cody Lees attorneys
andprosecutors regardinga report de-
fense attorneys say should be thrown
out because it is based on evidence
that had been suppressed in the case.
That evidence includes statements
Lee allegedly made to investigators
about the shooting death of his great-
grandfather, 80-year-old Herbert Lee,
in December 2009.
Because psychiatrist John OBrien
likely based his opinion in the report
on the statements Lee made, his re-
port and his testimony should be pro-
hibited from any further court hear-
ings, defense attorney Peter Paul Ols-
zewski argued.
The report, attorneys said, will be
used at a hearing where the judge will
decideif Leescaseshouldstayinadult
court or be handled in the countys ju-
venile system.
Olszewski, who represents Lee
along with attorneys Melissa Scartelli
and Charles Rado, argued it would be
impossible for OBrien to disregard or
set aside what he has already read.
First Assistant District AttorneyJeff
Tokachsaidwhenhe spoke toOBrien
about the issue, OBrien said his opin-
ion about Lee would not change, no
matterif hereadthestatementsornot.
Hes only giving his opinion to as-
sist thecourt (inthetransfer hearing),
not (about) the nature and circum-
stances of the offense, Tokach said.
Augello said hell need to review
OBriens report before he makes a de-
cision on allowing its use and
OBriens further testimony in the
case.
Augello also said a transfer to juve-
nile court hearing scheduled for next
weekwill beput off until December, al-
lowing himtime to rule and attorneys
to prepare for the hearing.
Lees attorneys also had requested
that evidence seized in a search war-
rant of Lees home a notebook and a
backpack be thrown out because
they were illegally taken and should
not be allowed to be used at a trial.
Augello said the request to throw
out the evidence will not be decided
until closer to a trial date, which has
not been scheduled.
Judge to rule on Lee trial evidence
The defense wants a psychiatric
report thrown out in the homicide
case against 17-year-old Cody Lee.
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE -- A large
number of supporters were
encouraged to come out and
Walk a Mile in her Shoes for
the Ruths Place House for
Hope annual walkathon on
Sunday.
Ruths Place is a womens
shelter founded in 2003 in the
city as a place for batteredand
abused women in Luzerne
County.
Funds from the event will
go to continue funding ongo-
ing programs at the organiza-
tion and to expand services to
meet growing demand.
This is by far our biggest
response ever, said Ruths
Place board President Bill Bo-
lan.
Bolan said the organization
has expanding its list of of-
fered services to now include
an on-site trauma specialist.
Many of the women who
come to us have been physi-
callyabused, sotraumacareis
vital, explained Bolan.
Various groups fromWilkes
University, Kings College,
Misericordia and Luzerne
County Community College
came out in a showof solidar-
ity.
It takes a community to
run a shelter, said Ruths
Place Director Kristen Topol-
ski as she scanned the gather-
ing crowd.
Just look around you. Peo-
ple want to help.
Walkathon raises funds to support Ruths Place womens shelter
Funds will go to continue
funding ongoing programs
and to expand services.
By STEVEN FONDO
Times Leader Correspondent
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Hundreds of walkers
took part in the
Ruths Place Walk-
athon Sunday in
Wilkes-Barre. Among
others, various
groups from Wilkes
University, Kings
College, Misericordia
and Luzerne County
Community College
came out in a show of
solidarity. Ruths
Place is a womens
shelter founded in
2003 in the city as a
place for battered
and abused women in
Luzerne County.
Funds from Sundays
event will go to con-
tinue funding ongoing
programs at the
organization and to
expand services to
meet growing de-
mand.
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 5A
N A T I O N & W O R L D
OAKLAND, CALIF.
Cops clear out protesters
R
iot-clad law enforcement officers
cleared out Oaklands weeks-old
anti-Wall Street encampment early
Monday, arresting Occupy demonstra-
tors and removing tents from a down-
town plaza after issuing several warn-
ings over the weekend.
Protesters appeared to put up little
resistance, and officers could be seen
calmly leading some demonstrators
away in plastic handcuffs. Warnings
from authorities had been similar to
those issued before officers used tear
gas and bean bag projectiles to clear
the encampment on Oct. 25.
Officers made 32 arrests during
Mondays raid, Police Chief Howard
Jordan said, adding that there were no
reports of injuries to officers or pro-
testers.
After officers blocked off the streets
surrounding Frank Ogawa Plaza, some
demonstrators gathered near the barri-
cades and vowed to return. By 9 a.m.,
however, most of the demonstrators
had left the area.
HOUSTON
Convicted of aiding al-Qaida
A Texas man accused of attempting
to sneak out of the country with re-
stricted U.S. military documents, mon-
ey and equipment in order to join al-
Qaida was convicted Monday of trying
to help the terrorist organization.
Barry Walter Bujol Jr. was convicted
of attempting to provide material sup-
port to a foreign terrorist organization
and aggravated identity theft. He faces
up to 20 years in prison when he is
sentenced Feb. 8.
Bujol, who is a U.S. citizen, repre-
sented himself at his trial, which was
heard at his request by a judge instead
of a jury. The verdict by U.S. District
Judge David Hittner came after a trial
that lasted less than four days, with
testimony ending last week.
Bujol, who was handcuffed, wore leg
irons and sat when the verdict was
read, did not appear to react after
Hittner announced his decision.
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
Non-suspect found guilty
A man who was not even a suspect
until he voluntarily gave up his DNA
was convicted Monday of killing three
New York women more than 15 years
ago.
Francisco Acevedo, 43, was found
guilty of the serial murders on the first
day of jury deliberations at the West-
chester County courthouse.
He could be sent to prison for 75
years to life when sentenced Jan. 17.
The killings occurred in Yonkers in
1989, 1991 and 1996. Each woman was
found strangled, naked, bound at the
hands and facing upward. They were
also linked to each other by DNA, but
police did not know whose DNA it was
until 2009.
MADISON, WIS.
Recall supporters to rally
Political foes hoping to recall Repub-
lican Gov. Scott Walker over his moves
to significantly curb union rights in
Wisconsin planned a late-night rally
and early morning pajama parties to
officially begin the effort.
More than 100 events were planned
across the state today to begin collect-
ing the more than 540,000 signatures
required to get a recall election on
Wisconsins ballot next year. Support-
ers have until Jan. 17 to turn in signa-
tures.
Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefsich and at
least three Republican state senators
also will be targeted for recall next
year. Two GOP state senators lost their
seats during recall elections this sum-
mer.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Homes get a Christmas makeover
Caren Sellars, owner of CBS Interiors,
hangs Christmas decorations as her
friend Harper Scott, 3, helps at the
home of Butch and Kelle Branson in
Henderson, Ky. on Monday afternoon.
Scott is the Bransons granddaughter.
Sellars said shes already decorated 7
other homes this season.
BEIRUT Pressure was mounting
Monday on the embattled regime of
President Bashar Assad as European
foreignministers agreedtoextendsanc-
tions against SyriaandKingAbdullahof
Jordan called on Assad to step down.
Syria remained defiant, however.
The Syrian people should not be wor-
ried because Syria is not Libya, the
countrys foreign minister, Walid al-
Moallem, said in a nationally televised
address.
Al-Moallems comments demon-
strate how the specter of Libyas long-
time ruler, Moammar Gadhafi, and his
ultimate fate ousted by rebels and
later killed in ignominious fashion
haunts Assads administration.
Syria is entering its eighth month of
unrest, which, according to the United
Nations, has resulted in some 3,500
dead, mostly civilians, in a government
crackdown on protesters. The Assad re-
gimesays armedIslamicterrorists are
behind a U.S.-backed conspiracy that
has killed more than1,000 security per-
sonnel.
If Bashar has the interest of his coun-
try, he would step down, King Abdul-
lah told the BBC in an interviews.
But Abdullah cautioned that a hand-
over alone would not be sufficient to
end the upheaval in Syria.
If he was to say Im going to step
down, but lets have new elections, lets
reachout to the people, lets get this as a
national dialogue, then it would work,
Abdullah told the BBC. But if youre
just goingtoremove one personandput
another person in, I think that youll
continue to see more of the same.
Abdullahs comments came after the
Arab League on Saturday moved to sus-
pend Syria because of what Arab minis-
ters called its failure to implement a
league-brokered peace plan meant to
ease the crisis in Syria. The Arab
League pact mandated that Damascus
withdraw forces from populated areas,
release prisoners and start a dialogue
withthe opposition, amongother steps.
MI DEAST TENSI ON King Abdullah of Jordan has called on President Assad to step down
Syria defiant in face of pressure
AP PHOTO
Pro-Syrian regime pro-
testers shout support
for President Bashar
Assad as they gather
outside the foreign
ministry in Damascus,
Syria, on Monday. For-
eign Minister Walid
al-Moallem accused
Arab states on Monday
of conspiring against
Damascus after the
Arab League voted to
suspend Syrias mem-
bership over the govern-
ments deadly crack-
down on an eight
month-old uprising.
By PATRICK J. MCDONNELL
Los Angeles Times
SHREVEPORT, La. The former boy-
friend of a woman who accused Republi-
can presidential contender Herman Cain
of inappropriate sexual
behavior said Monday
that he and this then-
girlfriend met the busi-
nessman in the late
1990s.
Victor Jay Zucker-
mans account of an
evening he, Sharon Bi-
alek and Cain spent together in 1997 di-
rectly contradicts the candidates asser-
tions that he had never met his accuser or
heard her name.
At that party, Mr. Cainengagedbothof
us in conversation, Zuckerman said at a
news conference, describinganafter party
Cain had invited them to in a hotel suite
after a National Restaurant Association
event in Chicago.
Cain was chief executive of the Wash-
ington trade group at the time.
Attorney Gloria Allred, who represents
Bialek, appeared at Zuckermans side and
calledonCaintoacknowledgethat hehad
met his accuser, one of at least four who
have alleged that Cain sexually harassed
ormadeunwantedadvancestowardthem.
Mr. Cains strategy of blanket denials
simplywont work,Allredsaid. Heneeds
to come clean with the American people.
Nowis the time.
Zuckerman said Bialek told him that
Cain inappropriately touched her later
that year when she met him in Washing-
ton to seek employment help after being
fired fromthe association.
Cain accusers former boyfriend says they met in 1997
Claim by Victor Jay Zuckerman
contradicts Cains assertion he
never met Sharon Bialek.
By JACK GILLUM
and HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press
Zuckerman
C M Y K
PAGE 6A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
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Exeter 299-7526
WEST WYOMING Resi-
dents are advised curbside pick-
up of yard waste has ended.
Curbside leaf collection will be
Nov. 28 and Dec. 12 for both
sections of town. Leaves should
be in open containers, not plas-
tic bags, and be put curbside the
day before pickup. Saturday
hours at the compost will end
after Nov. 12. Residents should
call the borough (693-1311) to
make arrangements for yard
waste dropoff.
KINGSTON Administration
offices will be closed Nov. 24
and 25 for Thanksgiving. The
tax office will be open Nov. 25
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Public Works will be closed Nov.
24 and Nov. 28. Zone 3 residents
should place garbage curbside
for pickup Dec. 1. Zone 1 resi-
dents should place commingled
recyclables curbside on Dec. 5.
Zones 1 and 2 residents should
place paper curbside on Dec. 12.
LOCAL BRIEFS
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 7A
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Its not hard to see
why judicial candidate
Jennifer Rogers gar-
nered the most votes in
Tuesdays general elec-
tion.
The Kingston Town-
ship resident beat out
her six competitors and
tallied a win in 27 Lu-
zerne County munici-
palities, for a total of
41,706 votes. Votes for
Rogers were not con-
centrated in one specif-
ic area in the county,
and they spanned from
the northern to south-
ern portion.
Fred Pierantoni, won
in17 municipalities; Jo-
seph Sklarosky, Jr., in
16 and Dick Hughes in
11.
Though Michael
Vough came in fourth
with his total number
of votes, 35,739, he did
not dominate in any
municipalities.
Candidate Lesa Gelb,
despite her 741-vote
win over Molly Hanlon
Mirabito, won in only
two municipalities,
while Mirabito, who ul-
timately lost her bid for
a judicial seat, won in
five.
Pierantoni received
39,881votes; Sklarosky,
39,535 votes; Vough,
35,739; Hughes, 34,995
and Gelb, 34,755.
Election results will
be certified by the Bu-
reau of Election today.
County judges serve
10-year terms and their
salary is $164,602 per
year.
PITTSTON
FORTY FORT
HARVEYS LAKE
DUPONT
LAFLIN
FAIRVIEW TWP.
Black Creek Twp 17.6%
Conyngham Twp 17.2%
Courtdale 15.9%
Dennison Twp 16.4%
Edwardsville 16.3%
Exeter Twp 17.4%
Fairmount Twp 16.5%
Foster Twp 17.1%
Franklin Twp 16.9%
Freeland 16.9%
Harveys Lake 18.4%
Hunlock Twp 16.4%
Huntington Twp 16.6%
Jeddo 17.3%
Kingston 16.0%
Lake Twp 18.0%
Larksville 16.1%
Laurel Run 17.5%
Nanticoke 16.4%
Nescopeck Twp 17.1%
Plymouth 16.0%
Plymouth Twp 16.4%
Ross Twp 17.0%
Sugar Notch 18.1%
Warrior Run 17.7%
White Haven 15.9%
Wilkes Barre 15.7%
Avoca 21.2%
Bear Creek Twp 16.3%
Dupont 26.0%
Duryea 21.0%
Exeter 18.5%
Hughestown 22.3%
Jenkins Twp 20.1%
Laflin 16.1%
Newport Twp 16.6%
Penn Lake Park 16.8%
Pittston 21.3%
Pittston Twp 22.3%
Union Twp 16.1%
West Pittston 18.8%
West Wyoming 16.7%
Wyoming 17.6%
Yatesville 22.4%
Ashley 16.1%
Buck Twp 17.4%
Butler Twp 17.0%
Conyngham 18.5%
Fairview Twp 17.6%
Hanover Twp 15.6%
Hazle Twp 19.4%
Hazleton City 19.6%
New Columbus 18.8%
Nuangola 15.6%
Plains Twp 17.1%
Rice Twp 16.4%
Sugarloaf Twp 19.4%
West Hazleton 18.9%
Wilkes Barre Twp 17.5%
Wright Twp 16.3%
won no municipalities
Bear Creek Vlg 26.2%
Dallas 18.2%
Dallas Twp 17.1%
Dorrance Twp 17.3%
Hollenback Twp 17.8%
Jackson Twp 17.0%
Kingston Twp 17.5%
Lehman Twp 17.1%
Nuangola 15.6%
Shickshinny 19.5%
Slocum Twp 18.3%
Nescopeck 18.3%
Salem Twp 16.4%
Forty Fort 19.8%
Larksville 16.1%
Luzerne 18.3%
Pringle 17.3%
Swoyersville 16.7%
JenniferRogers
HarveysLake
FredPierantoni
Dupont
JoeSklarosky
FairviewTwp.
Michael Vough
Pittston
DickHughes
FairviewTwp.
LesaGelb
Laflin
MollyHanlonMirabito
FortyFort
2
1
3
4
7
6
5
Notes: Based on unofficial results
Percentages are of votes won in that municipality
Rogers and Mirabito tied in Larksville
Sklarosky and Hughes tied in Nuangola
Vough won a seat without winning a municipality
Source: Luzerne County Election Bureau
Luzerne Countys new judges: Where they live and where they won
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
SCRANTON An attorney for the
Wyoming Valley West School District
has asked a judge to dismiss a federal
lawsuit filedbyateacher whoclaimsshe
was wrongly suspended after she was
falsely accusedof abusing students.
Angela Kairo-Scibek of Plymouth fil-
ed suit in 2009, alleging the district vio-
lated her right to due process when it
suspendedherin2007afterpolicebegan
investigating allegations she had struck
three special education students with a
woodenobject.
Kairo-Scibek was later cleared of the
chargesafterthestudentsadmittedthey
made upthe allegations. The district re-
instated her and paid her all back wages
once the charges were dropped.
The lawsuit, filed by attorney Mary
Walsh-Dempsey of Scranton, claimed
the district violated Kairo-Scibeks
rights because it failed to provide her a
hearingtocontest theallegations before
it suspendedher.
InamotionfiledMonday, thedistricts
attorney, RobinSnyder of Scranton, said
the district was obligated to take imme-
diate action, given the allegations of
abuse, in order to ensure the safety of
students.
The district could not allow the
plaintiff to return to the classroomuntil
these allegations and charges were re-
solvedandto suggest otherwise is ridic-
ulous, Snyder wrote.
Snyder alsosays the state school code
only requires a hearing if a teacher is to
be terminated. Kairo-Scibek was sus-
pended, therefore no hearing was need-
ed.
Snyder further argues that Kairo-Sci-
beks complaint against the district was
resolved through the unions grievance
process, which resulted in her being re-
instated, although to a different posi-
tion, andreimbursedfor all her backpay
she lost while onsuspension.
Kairo-Scibeks attorney will have an
opportunitytorespondtothe motion. A
judge will issue a ruling at a later date.
WVW wants
teachers suit
dismissed
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE A wom-
an convicted of cruelty to
animals in a case in which
prosecutors say she pierced
and docked the tails of kittens
was released from the county
jail on parole Monday.
Holly A. Crawford, 36, of
Sweet Valley, was paroled
from a three- to six-month
stint at the prison after serv-
ing the minimum.
Crawford had been sen-
tenced in August to the jail
term by Judge Tina Polachek
Gartley after violating the
terms of her probation when
she was charged with a pos-
session of a controlled sub-
stance and drug paraphernalia
charge in Wyoming County.
Crawford had been convict-
ed in February 2010 of one
misdemeanor and one sum-
mary count of cruelty to ani-
mals, and was sentenced to
six months of house arrest
and one year, three months
probation. Crawford appealed
her conviction, but it was
upheld by the state Superior
Court in June.
Polachek Gartley said Craw-
ford would be released Mon-
day pending any other detain-
ers, and that she must get a
fulltime job, attend Narcotics
and Alcoholics Anonymous
meetings every week and
complete 50 hours of commu-
nity service.
WILKES-BARRE -- A man
and woman from Luzerne
pleaded guilty Monday to
several drug-related charges
for their roles in selling and
possessing illegal narcotics.
Nicole Marie Milunic, 23,
and Christopher Brandon Ma-
son, 39, both of Ryman
Street, entered their pleas
before Luzerne County Senior
Judge Joseph Augello to 10
and 12 related counts, respec-
tively.
Augello said both will be
sentenced on Jan. 5. Assistant
District Attorney Jill Mat-
thews Lada said she is seek-
ing a mandatory minimum
sentence of five to 10 years in
prison for both Milunic and
Mason.
According to court papers,
on Oct. 10, 2010, police
served a search warrant on a
Coal Street, Plymouth, home
that the two had previously
lived in. Police said they
found several items, including
six firearms, marijuana, hero-
in, syringes, ecstasy tablets,
steroids and four cell phones.
Milunic later told police that
Mason sells heroin, cocaine
and weed out of their home,
and that they got to New
York to obtain the drugs to
help out their business, Skin
City Tattoo in Wilkes-Barre.
Milunic said she sometimes
sold drugs for Mason, and
that the steroids were for
Masons own use.
Police said on two different
occasions Milunic and Mason
sold suspected heroin to a
police informant, and that in
a May 2011 incident, police
searched the home of Milun-
ics father, where a bag of
suspected heroin had been
stored. Mason later told police
that bag of drugs was his.
WILKES-BARRE Sexual
assault charges against a city
man scheduled to stand trial
Monday were dismissed after
prosecutors said they were
unable to make contact with
the alleged victims mother.
Five related charges against
Gomez Balentine, 30, includ-
ing statutory sexual assault,
were dismissed by Luzerne
County Senior Judge Kenneth
Brown after prosecutors said
they could not make contact
with the girls mother.
Balentine was charged in
September 2010 with assault-
ing a then-10-year-old girl. The
girl had told police Balentine
assaulted her over a four-
month period.
In April, Balentine had
pleaded guilty to an involun-
tary deviate sexual intercourse
charge, but then had with-
drawn the plea in July, lead-
ing to Mondays trial date.
COURT BRIEFS
C M Y K
PAGE 8A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
quehanna River.
County officials had been re-
luctant to get involved because
Wilkes-Barre had not committed
to sharing in demolition costs.
Wilkes-Barre city officials have
since agreed to provide about
$260,000 earmarked from gam-
ing funds for the project, pending
state approval. That funding was
allocated for restoration of the
building and would have to be re-
programmed for demolition, offi-
cials said.
County Chief Engineer Joe
Gibbons will oversee the demoli-
tionbidding. County officials will
have to revisit the matter if the
bids exceed $1.26 million, Reilly
said.
The $1 million would come
from a business development
loan fund. About $10 million
would remain in the fund after
the demolition expense, Reilly
said.
County Commissioner Ste-
phenA. Urbanstressedthat these
funds couldnt be used to cover
staffing or other expenses in the
countys strained general fund
operating budget.
Some documentation of the
building may be required be-
cause it is a historic structure,
Reilly said. The county recently
sought public comment on possi-
bledemolitionandreceivedeight
written responses, a mix of posi-
tions that the building should be
restored or torn down, he said.
A group of citizens protesting
the demolition submitted a pet-
ition, he said.
Sally Healey, one of the faithful
Save Our Sterling picketers,
said shes been to many cities
with preserved historic buildings
and believes officials will regret
the loss of the Sterling. She said
CityVest representatives and lo-
cal officials made promising
statements about the buildings
future for years, leaving many
shocked when the plans fizzled.
Were saddened the way the
whole thing went down, Healey
said. Were just all disappointed
at the commissioners decision.
Just hearing it makes you feel
blue.
STERLING
Continued from Page 1A
hours, 54 minutes, which works
out to an average of around 82
mph.
In order to minimize time lost
refueling, the PRDA team fitted
the van with five,
55-gallon steel
drums filled with
gasoline connected
by a multiple fuel
pump system. A
plywood board was
placed over the top
to allow one mem-
ber to sleep at all
times.
The race and its
competitors want-
ed to prove a point that roads
can be traveled at high speeds
without incident.
Speedlimits are a farce andan
abomination, Yates would say in
1971. There is getting to be too
much order imposed on peoples
lives. Everything is going toward
eliminating our aspirations.
Yates wanted to prove that ca-
pable drivers in good automo-
biles could employ the U.S. inter-
state system the same way the
Germans were using their Auto-
bahns.
Andsothe original Cannonball
Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memo-
rial Trophy Dash
was born. The
event was namedin
honor of auto racer
Erwin G. Cannon
Ball Baker.
The PRDAsent a
telegram to Yates
challenging him to
a race.
The telegram
read: This consti-
tutes formal entry
by the Polish Racing Drivers of
America in the next official Can-
nonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-
Sea Memorial Trophy Dash. The
drivers are Oscar Kovaleski, Brad
Niemcek and Tony Adamowicz.
If we can find California, well
beat you fair and square.
According to Kovaleski, the
teams gathered 40 years ago to-
day at the Red Ball Garage in
Manhattan.
Kovaleski said the finish was at
the Portofino Inn in Redondo
Beach, Calif., onNov. 17. The Pol-
ish Racing Drivers arrived in
their Chevy van less than an hour
behind, in second place.
At the finish, Gurney told the
Los Angeles Times, At no time
did we exceed 175 mph.
In1981, the movie Cannonball
Run was released starring Burt
Reynolds, Farrah Fawcett, Dom
DeLuise and Roger Moore.
Kovaleski said the van was a
dangerous vehicle modifiedtoas-
sure it wouldnt roll onturns. The
300 gallons of gas werent
enough to finish the race; they
had to add another 70 gallons or
so to reach the finish line.
Kovaleski, a long-time support-
er of the Giants Despair Hill
Climb, said the Cannonball Run
was a dangerous event and
should never be run again.
He doesnt like to talk about
the outlaw speed test hed
much prefer talking about his
grandchildren and his newest
venture Kidracers an organi-
zation that teaches children how
to drive before they turn 5. More
information is available at kidra-
cers.com.
Yates wrote a book Cannon-
ball! Worlds Greatest Outlaw
Road Race. On the back cover,
Yates described the race as: The
Cannonball, a flat-out high-speed
road race across the United
States, was an orgy of fast cars pi-
loted by the best drivers of the
day, andanaffront to lawenforce-
ment and all things good and de-
cent.
RUN
Continued from Page 1A
I dont ever want
to see young peo-
ple go out and do
that again.
Oscar Kovaleski
Cannonball Run
participant
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Oscar Kovaleski, a partici-
pant in the 1971 Cannon-
ball Run, looks over some
of the racing scrapbooks
he has collected over his
years of racing. Kovaleski
says his groups 1971 en-
try into the cross-country
race was a dangerous
decision. Kovaleski, Tony
Adamowicz and Brad
Niemcek came in second
in the near-3,000 mile
race. They finished 53
minutes behind a Ferrari
driven in shifts by profes-
sional race driver Dan
Gurney and automotive
journalist Brock Yates.
to check out, he tells the clerk he
has a gunandtoturnover money.
KingstonTownshipPolice Chief
James Balavage said the heist at
the Dollar General was reportedat
8:30 a.m.
Plains Township police said the
knife-point robbery at the Uni-
Mart was at 7:36 a.m.
Thirty minutes earlier, city po-
lice said a man tried to rob the
McDonalds restaurant, passing a
note to an employee that stated:
Dont scream; be quiet, give me
the money fromthe register.
The man fled McDonalds after
the employee said she couldnt
open the register. He ran toward
Toys RUs and escaped capture.
The suspect inthe Tacobell rob-
bery was a white male in his 20s,
thin build, about 5 feet 10 inches
tall, wearing a red hooded sweat-
shirt. He entered the restaurant,
handedanemployeeanotestating,
Give me all your money, and
threatened to shoot the employee,
city police said.
Police could not say if the man
was using a vehicle.
ROBBERY
Continued from Page 1A
on everyone else who isnt benefiting
from the business.
In 2008, DEP administered a 30-acre
mine reclamation project funded by
grants on property across from
the site, andBrdaric Excavating
performed the work. That area
remains undeveloped.
Why would someone want
tolive belowthe quarry, withall
thenoise, dirt, runawaytrucks,
said Coniglios daughter, Co-
rine. If the town is moving for
progress to clean up that area,
expansion of the quarry seems like a step
backwards.
Joseph Maratano, an engineering con-
sultant for theproject, saidissues relating
to excessive water runoff directly coinci-
de withthe mine reclamationproject, not
anything Brdaric has done at the quarry.
He said the issue is slowly resolving it-
self as vegetation grows at the site.
Safety and truck traffic are other con-
cerns residents have with the quarrys ex-
pansion. William Coniglio said the steep
road off Main Street leading to Brdarics
operation is dangerous, and the expan-
sion will lead to more trucks coming in
and out of the quarry.
The streets of Swoyersville and Lu-
zerne boroughs were not designed to
handle large trucks and trailer traffic on a
daily basis, he wrote ina letter toMundy
in June. Furthermore, there have been
several trucks run off the roadway de-
scending the steep hill to the quarry.
Corine Coniglio said she believes the
way the permit process has been handled
by DEP is questionable, as
the only newspaper in which
there was any notice of the
expansion was the Suburban
News, a local weeklypublica-
tion based in Sweet Valley.
Mundy said she is unsure
whether DEP is mandated
by law to schedule public
hearings on such applica-
tions, and she was unaware the applica-
tion was being considered again until
William Coniglio brought it to her atten-
tion.
Ive been following this issue for long
time, she said. DEP should have come
forward and said the application was in
the process of being modified.
A recent public notice from DEP in a
local daily newspaper stated the permit
modification includes the beneficial use
of coal ash for reclamation, which was in-
accurate. Nocorrectionhas beenpublish-
ed.
Messages left for a DEP spokesperson
were not immediately returned.
QUARRY
Continued from Page 3A
Safety and truck
traffic are other
concerns resi-
dents have with
the quarrys ex-
pansion.
cil, did not receive a packet
because he didnot submit a
confidentiality agreement,
but he may be out of the se-
lection process regardless.
The committee agreed at
the start of the meetingthat
no applicants for either the
manager or council clerk
post should participate in
any decisions involving the
selection for those posts.
Committee consultant Ken
Mohr, the only person who
saw the applications, said
he was aware of two com-
mittee members who had a
conflict of interest in either
position.
Stephen A. Urban ab-
stained from votes on the
manager selection process
but would not say whether
or not he applied for the
manager position. He face-
tiouslysaidhewouldbevio-
lating the confidentiality
agreement if he disclosed
that he was an applicant.
The identity of the other
The business has a small
contract with a county au-
thority, and the charter pro-
hibits council members
from employment or com-
pensation by a company
that does business with a
county authority. Williams
said the business must hon-
or its obligationto fulfill the
authority contract, and he
doesnt want togiveupserv-
ing as a council member.
The committee agreed
on categories that will be
used to rank the manager
applicants: education, lead-
ership, county/local gov-
ernment experience, dem-
onstration of outcomes and
other standout skills or
traits.
Thegroupdifferedonthe
weight that should be given
to each category but came
up with percentages by ma-
jority vote.
committee member with a
conflict was not known be-
cause nobody else ab-
stained.
The committee decided
that any other members
who identify conflicts when
they review the packets
should abstain from future
decisions for those posi-
tions.
Morelli made a motion
during the meeting to re-
lease applicant names for
both positions, but he only
received support from Ste-
phen A. Urban and Stephen
J. Urban. Councilman-elect
Rick Williams also made a
motion to reopen the appli-
cation process for two
weeks guaranteeing confi-
dentiality to applicants, but
he received support only
from Commissioner Tho-
mas Cooney, Stephen J. Ur-
ban and Stephen A. Urban.
Williams announced dur-
ing the meeting that he will
give up his employment at
Williams, Kinsman&Lewis
Architecture when he takes
office on Jan. 2 because of a
prohibitioninthehomerule
charter.
MANAGER
Continued from Page 3A
The home rule transition
committee will meet at
6:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the second floor jury room
at the county courthouse
in Wilkes-Barre.
I F YO U G O
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 9A
N E W S
NUANGOLA Theodore
Ted Vancosky, a resident of
Vandermark Road, was elected
bya 4-2vote at a special meeting
on Monday to serve on borough
council, filling the unexpired
term of Steven Hudack, whose
resignation became effective in
mid-October.
Vancosky was nominated by
CouncilmanDoug Fawbushand
supported by the votes of a ma-
jority of council that consists of
Chairperson Regina Plodwick,
Anthony Deluca, and Conrad
Plodwick in addition to Faw-
bush. A minority of council,
madeupof JohnKochanandJoe
Tucker nominated Joan Shirk, a
resident of North End Road.
When a role call was conducted,
Shirk received only the votes of
Kochan and Tucker.
Vancosky, who said he has
beenaresident of Nuangolafor 8
years, describedhimself asbeing
an independent who will, when
it comes to borough affairs, be
myownman.Hewasswornin-
toofficebyMayor NormanRule.
At the time of Hudacks resigna-
tion, ChairpersonPlodwick said
that council had30daystoselect
a replacement. Although there
was some public debate as to
whenHudack actually resigned,
it was finally resolved that it be-
came effective October 17,
meaning that Nuangola in
choosing Vancosky fell within
the boundaries of boroughcode.
Vancosky is a native of West
Scranton; anemployee inNucle-
ar Medicine for General Electric
at Hanover Industrial Estates;
andaformer businessmaninRe-
no, Nev. He saidprior to moving
to Nuangola he operated a small
luggage service business at the
Reno Airport. Vancosky is
scheduled to serve until 2014.
Fawbush and Conrad Plod-
wick will no longer be council-
men come January. The voters
supplanted themwith Ron Kais-
er and Elaine Donohue. Kochan
rana successful incumbent cam-
paign. Kaiser and Donohue will
begin serving in January, 2012.
There was also some debate
over Nuangolas Act 537 sewage
plan, which ended when Atty.
Robert Gonos, solicitor for sew-
er authority, proposed that is-
sues surrounding modules and
pumping stations need to be re-
solved by the boroughs engi-
neer, A. Benesch &Company.
NUANGOL A
Vancosky elected to
vacant council seat
Theodore Vancosky will
replace Steven Hudack, who
resigned effective in October.
By TOMHUNTINGTON
Times Leader Correspondent
WARRIOR RUN -- The War-
rior Run Council passed two or-
dinances at Monday nights
meeting. One ordinance updat-
ed an older curfew ordinance.
The boroughs curfew for
those under 18 years old will
nowbe 10 p.m. unless accompa-
nied by a parent or guardian.
The council also passed an ordi-
nance to give police authority to
remove vehicles which are inop-
erable, abandoned or disabled.
The ordinance would make ex-
ceptions for vehicles stored in
garages or those being sold on
dealer lots.
The council also passed a res-
olution to renew the contract
with the Nanticoke Police De-
partment. The 2012 contract
would remain the same as the
2011 one except for the fact that
Nanticoke would retain any traf-
fic fines generated through po-
lice enforcement.
Borough Solicitor James Py-
rah presented to the board sug-
gestions by Greg Gulick from G
& R Consulting who is being
considered for the position of
borough code enforcement offi-
cer. Pyrah passed on the recom-
mendation that the council
adopt both the Pennsylvania
Uniform Construction Code
and the International Property
Maintenance Code.
These codes would allow a
borough code officer to issue
permits and cite properties
which do not conform to the
code. Pyrah pointed out that the
borough opted out of the Uni-
form Construction Code in
2004.
The council decided to study
the codes before voting on ac-
ceptance at the December meet-
ing.
Borough Engineer, Paul Pa-
sonick, reported on problems
with the pumping station. The
high demand on the pumps sug-
gestedthat there may be a water
main break. Pasonick recom-
mended that the borough wait
until the next heavy rain before
hiring a contractor to locate the
problem by using cameras.
WARRI OR RUN
Council moves curfew,
updates junk car rules
Ordinances move curfew to 10
p.m., give police authority to
remove abandonded vehicles.
By SUSAN DENNEY
Times Leader Correspondent
WRIGHT TWP- Supervisor
Chairman Louis Welebob Jr.
does not foresee an increase in
taxes for Wright Township. He
announced there will be a bud-
get meeting on Dec. 5 at 4 p.m.
to approve the budget for 2012.
Welebob also announced that
there are 3 openings on the
Township RecreationBoardand
one on the Planning Commis-
sion. Welebob encouraged any-
one that is interestedinthe posi-
tions to submit applications to
the municipal building. Wele-
bob plans on taking interested
applicants until Nov. 30.
The board also approved Res-
olution 728 and 729 for Hurri-
cane Irene Disaster Relief and
Tropical Storm Lee. The Board
approved Chairman Welebob Jr.
to execute for and in behalf of
Wright Township.
Aresolution was approved for
the purpose to transfer a liquor
License into Wright Township
by Mountaintop Six Packs To
Go, LLC. located at 195 South
Mountain Boulevard in the
Township.
Supervisors appointed Koval-
chik-Kollar and Co. LLC as an
Independent auditor for the
2011 fiscal year at a cost of
$4125.00
The township opened bids
from three companies for work
as a result of the damage from
the hurricane and the tropical
storm. There has been damage
to the roads, bridges and drain-
age within the Township. The
bid was won by Pioneer Con-
struction Company at a cost of
$25,012.00. However, if FEMA
does not approve, there will be
no contract to the bidder.
Resident Mark Nilon of Capi-
tol Hill Village addressed the
board on the upcoming Dec. 1
hearing regarding the Capitol
Hill Village apartment building.
Nilon said the condition of the
Capitol Village Apartment
building exterior is in serious
need of improvement and looks
forward to the hearing in an ef-
fort to clean the apartment area
up for the other residents.
WRI GHT TWP.
Supervisor doesnt see tax hike for 12
By JIMMORRISSEY
Times Leader Correspondent
PITTSTONTheNEPANeeds
Jobscoalitionusedthestructural-
ly deficient Water Street Bridge
Monday as one reason Congress
needs to pass the American Jobs
Act, which members say would
create and save jobs and pay for
bridge repairs nationwide.
The coalition, whose website
links it to organizations such as
MoveOn.org,
the American
Dream Move-
ment and the
Service Work-
ers Interna-
tional Union,
is planning a
rally near the
bridge in Pitt-
ston on Thurs-
day to get that
message
across, and co-
ordinator A.J. Marin asked the
handful of attendees Monday to
spread the word along with fliers
about the rally.
Marin, of Wilkes-Barre, gavean
approximately 30-minute pre-
sentationonthe bridge, citingda-
ta from the state Department of
Transportation showing that
whileanaverageof 8,655vehicles
cross it daily, the substructure of
the bridge is structurally defi-
cient and the deck and super-
structure are borderline defi-
cient.
Marin said the bridge, which is
owned by Luzerne County, isnt
being repaired because neither
the county nor the state nor the
federal government has money
budgeted, but it andthousands of
other structurally deficient
bridges across the state and na-
tion should be.
We saw what happened in
Minnesotawhenforyearsbridges
were left without being fixed and
then finally there was the trage-
dy, Marin said, referring to the
2007 collapse of the Interstate 35
Bridge over the Mississippi River
in downtown Minneapolis that
killed13 people.
Marin said the Congressional
Budget Office reports that the
AmericanJobsAct wouldprovide
funding to create or save 44,600
jobsinPennsylvania2,500inthe
11th Congressional District
alone, with 985 of those being for
fixing bridges and 792 to rehire
laid-off teachers and emergency
responders.
Marin said U.S. Sen. Pat Too-
mey, R-Zionsville, and U.S. Rep.
Lou Barletta, R-Hazleton, oppose
the American Jobs Act, which
was put forthbyPresident Barack
Obama. Toomey and Barletta
bothhavereferredtotheact asan-
other stimulus bill that wont
create any more jobs thanthe last
stimulus bill.
Marin said a major purpose of
the rally scheduled for Thursday
is to let their elected officials
knowthey support the American
Jobs Act.
PI TTSTON
Group to rally for jobs bill
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
The NEPA Needs Jobs coalition says the Water Street Bridge in Pittston would benefit from pas-
sage of President Obamas American Jobs Act .
NEPA Needs Jobs says
passing Presidents plan
would help repair bridges.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
What: NEPA
Needs Jobs rally
and candlelight
vigil
When: 4 p.m.
Thursday
Where: Water
Street at Kenne-
dy Boulevard,
Pittston
I F YOU
GO
WYOMING -- At its regular
meeting Monday night at the
Borough Building, Wyoming
Council approved placing the
proposed municipal budget for
fiscal year 2012 on public view
until next months meeting.
Council plans toapproveafinal
budget at next months meeting.
President of Council Stephen Na-
lewajko stated that the
$1,022,000 proposed Wyoming
budget does not include a tax in-
crease. Council is discussing a
separate sewer fee which would
be dedicated to cover the Wyom-
ing Borough share of a
$1,500,000 grant to install new
sewer lines inportions of the Bor-
ough.
At the request of Councilman
William Starr, council voted
unanimously to hire Integrated
Capital Management of Scranton
to manage the Wyoming Police
Pension fund for a fee of $10,292.
Upon a motion by Councilwom-
an Diane Smiles, council ap-
proved a resolution to prepare
and advertise for bids proposals
to provide sanitation services for
the Borough starting Jan. 1, 2012.
Council also adopted a resolu-
tion to spend $4,000 to replace
some of the Christmas decora-
tions used along Wyoming Ave-
nue which were damaged in the
recent flood.
Mayor Robert Boyer also ex-
plained the Borough was given
approximately $1,500 by local
business firms to assist those in
need due to the flooding. The
mayor said that since there was
very little need for assistance in
Wyoming, the remaining funds
were donated to the West Pitt-
ston Library, Second Presbyter-
ian Church of West Pittston, and
the churches in West Pittston
that were providing meals to
flood victims.
Council discussed in general
the feasibility of using Forty Fort
Boroughto provide code enforce-
ment services to Wyoming Bor-
ough.
There was also discussion of
the feasibility of adopting the Lu-
zerne County planning and zon-
ing ordinances, and the Borough
using the Luzerne County Plan-
ning Commission to act as the
agent for the Borough in zoning
and land development. Solicitor
Ferentino is researching the mat-
ter.
Finally, an update was provid-
ed on the codification of the Bor-
ough ordinances. The process to
copy andorganize the ordinances
began on Nov. 9, and the project
will take approximately six
months to complete.
The borough will next meet on
Dec. 12.
WYOMI NG
2012 budget will be on public view
Council approved the measure
with plans to OK the budget
at next months meeting.
By WILLIAMBELL
Times Leader Correspondent
FORTY FORT -- Kingston/
Forty Fort Fire Chief Frank Gui-
do answered questions before
council on Monday regarding a
mutual aid agreement with the
city of Wilkes-Barre to provide
back-up emergency ambulance
and fire coverage.
Several council members had
questions about the specific lan-
guage of the agreement. We pay
a large amount of money for five,
full-time fire truck drivers, said
councilwoman Dorothy Craig.
Imjust concerned that if theyre
out on calls around the valley, no
one will be here to service Forty
Fort emergencies.
Chief Guido said the agree-
ment with Wilkes-Barre calls for
the newly merged Kingston/For-
ty Fort fire and ambulance to be
third due in any uncovered
Wilkes-Barre emergency. He also
stated that the department
would receive revenue from the
Wilkes-Barre calls through addi-
tion service billing.
Im not certain of the partic-
ulars regarding money, ex-
plained Guido, but all the reve-
nue from the Wilkes-Barre agree-
ment will go to the equipment
fund. Guido also emphasized
that it is a common practice for
local municipalities to participa-
te in what he called mutual aid
agreements.
Forty Fort councilman, Frank
Michaels questioned whether
Wilkes-Barre was simply trying
to keep taxes low by under-staf-
ing emergency services.
In other business, council vot-
ed unanimously to hire James
Santewan Jras, a part-time DPW
laborer, at a wage of $8.50 per
hour for 30 hours a week. Coun-
cil officials said Santewan is a
skilled and experienced laborer
who will be assigned a number of
different duties within the de-
partment.
Council also voted to approve
a Department of Community and
Economic Development Local
Share Account Grant Program
audit for Phase I of the ongoing
Welles Street construction pro-
ject which began earlier this year.
FORTY FORT
Fire chief discusses agreement with W-B department
Council expresseed concern
the deal could leave Fort Fort
without service at times.
By STEVEN FONDO
Times Leader Correspondent
BEARCREEKTWP. -- Nodeci-
sion has been made on the Act
537 sewer plan, Bear Creek
Township supervisors said Mon-
day.
At a meeting that was resche-
duled fromNov. 7 because a pub-
lic hearing on the Act 537 plan
ran more than three and a half
hours, supervisor Chairperson
Gary Zingaretti said the board
has not taken any action on the
plan as of yet.
Dozens of residents who will
be requiredtohookuptothe sew-
er system shared their concerns
and comments during that meet-
ing, and Zingaretti said the board
will meet to consider and discuss
the comments before they are
sent on the Department of Envi-
ronmental Protection.
Supervisors spent most of the
meeting reviewing routine mat-
ters before a resident raised ques-
tions pertaining to permits. The
resident said a homeowner near
him connected a house and a ga-
rage on the same property with
an enclosed breezeway that ap-
pears to be more of an addition to
the home, and he questioned
whether this was permissibleand
whether the proper permits were
in place.
Noting that the resident might
have a valid concern, Supervisor
Jim Smith suggested township
officials look into the situation
and see if proper permits were in
place and if all zoning rules were
followed.
The supervisors also respon-
ded to an audience question
about whether an amusement
tax was collected for a car show
held earlier this year.
Zingaretti said the tax has not
yet been collected because it was
discovered that the contract with
Berkheimer Associates does not
include the collection of amuse-
ment taxes and the township will
have to bill for the tax itself.
BEAR CREEK TOWNSHI P
Board makes no decision on controversial Act 537 sewer plan
By JANINE UNGVARSKY
Times Leader Correspondent
K
PAGE 10A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
O B I T U A R I E S
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es free obituaries, which
have a 27-line limit, and paid
obituaries, which can run
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or must name who is hand-
ling arrangements, with
address and phone number.
We discourage handwritten
notices; they incur a $15
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O B I T U A R Y P O L I C Y
G enettis
AfterFu nera lLu ncheons
Sta rting a t$7.95 p erp erson
H otelBerea vem entRa tes
825.6477
Funeral Lunches
starting at $
7.95
www.omarscastleinn.com 675-0804
Memorial Highway, Dallas
BUDD Sister Rosemary, Mass of
Christian Burial 10:30 a.m. today
in Mercy Center Chapel, Dallas.
CALLAHAN Mary, celebration of
life with Funeral Mass 1 p.m.
Wednesday in the Chapel at Little
Flower Manor, 200 S. Meade St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call at
noon in the Chapel at Little
Flower Manor.
CORCORAN Marion, funeral
services 9:30 a.m. today in the
Nat & Gawlas Funeral Home, 89
Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Mass of
Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in St.
Benedict Parish, Wilkes-Barre.
COSTELLO Margaret, memorial
Mass, 11 a.m. Saturday in St. John
the Evangelist Church, Pittston.
EVANS Marian, funeral service 11
a.m. Wednesday in Luzerne
United Methodist Church, 446
Bennett St., Luzerne. Friends may
call 4 to 8 p.m. today and 10 a.m.
until service time Wednesday at
the church.
MENDYGRAL Edna, funeral 9:30
a.m. today in the Kniffen OMalley
Funeral Home, Inc., 465 S. Main
St., Wilkes-Barre. Services at 10
a.m. in St. Peters Lutheran
Church, 1000 S. Main St., Hanover
Township.
OZARK Louise, funeral 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday in the Lokuta-Zawacki
Funeral Home, 200 Wyoming
Ave., Dupont. Mass of Christian
Burial at 10 a.m. in Sacred Heart
of Jesus Church, 215 Lackawanna
Ave., Dupont. Friends may call 5
to 8 p.m. today.
POLAK Mary, funeral 10:30 a.m.
today in the S.J. Grontkowski
Funeral Home, 530 W. Main St.,
Plymouth. Mass of Christian Burial
at 11a.m. at St. Robert Bellarmine
Parish at St. Aloysius Church, Lee
Park. Friends may call 9:30 a.m.
until funeral time.
STEFANOWICZ Mary Ann, funeral
9 a.m. today in the E. Blake Collins
Funeral Home, 159 George Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre. Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. in Ss. Peter and
Paul Church.
FUNERALS
THERESA KEHOE of Gam-
brills, Md., passed away on Friday,
November 11, 2011, after a lengthy
illness. She was preceded in death
by her husbandof 54years, the late
Francis Kehoe Sr. She is survived
by her children, Colleen Kehoe of
Jessup, Denise Kehoe of Gam-
brills, and Frank (Debbie) of Gam-
brills. She is also survived by four
grandchildren, and13 great-grand-
children.
Visitationwill be at the Hardes-
ty Funeral Home, 851 Annapolis
Road, Gambrills, MD 21054 today
from5 to 8 p.m., with a Rosary at 6
p.m. Mass of the Christian Burial
will be held on Wednesday at
11a.m. at Our Ladyof theFields Ca-
tholic Church, 1070 Cecil Ave.,
Millersville, MD21108. The family
has requested that in lieu of flow-
ers, donations may be made to
Hospice of the Chesapeake, 445
Defense Highway, Annapolis, MD
21401 or Church of the Holy Apos-
tles, 2601 Symphony Lane, Gam-
brills, MD 21054.
MRS. SARAH E. (SALLY)
MCHUGH, age 70, of Julia Street,
Dushore, Pa., died Saturday, No-
vember 12, 2011.
To express condolences or sign
the guestbook, please go to
www.homerfuneralhome.com.
F
rancis T. Blaum, 91, passed away
on November 12, 2011 in Hous-
ton, Texas.
Frank, the son of Catherine and
Frank Blaum, was born and raised in
Wilkes-Barre. He proudly served in
the ArmyduringWorldWar II, partic-
ipating in the Battle of the Bulge.
He and his wife, Bernice, recently
celebrated their 65th wedding anni-
versary.
He worked for 25 years for the
Graybar Electric Company. After re-
tirement from the working world, he
enjoyed 33 wonderful years of golf-
ing, sailing and woodworking. He
served in many capacities at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Conroe,
Texas, including the parish council
and the stewardship committee. He
and his wife also donated their time
working in a soup kitchen in Conroe.
He was dearly loved and will be mis-
sed by his family.
Frank is survived by: wife, Bernice
Blaum; daughter, Deborah Peck and
husband, Patrick Peck, Sr.; grand-
daughters, Amy and Laura Peck;
grandson, Patrick Peck, Jr. and wife,
Sarah.
Avisitationwill be held from6
to 8 p.m. today at Forest Park
Westheimer Funeral Home, 12800
Westheimer, Houston, TX77077. Fu-
neral services will begin at 11a.m. on
Wednesday, November 16 at St. Cyril
of Alexandria Church, 10503 West-
heimer, Houston, TX 77042.
Francis T. Blaum
November 12, 2011
J
udithEisenhower BrownTurner,
76, of Bridgton, Maine formerly
of Dallas, Pa., passed away Nov. 12,
2011 at the Bridgton Hospital.
She was born in Kingston, Pa., on
Oct. 8, 1935 along withher identical
twinSuzanne. They were the first of
two sets of twins of Mary and Ha-
rold Brown.
She graduated from Wyoming
Seminary and the University Of
Pennsylvania School Of Nursing.
She worked in Nesbitt Hospital,
Kingston, and St Luke Hospital in
Bethlehem, as an OBGYN nurse.
She was active in many Luzerne
County organizations including the
SPCA, the UnitedWay, PlannedPar-
enthood and the Wilkes-Barre Ju-
nior League.
Judy was a well-known and re-
spected horsewoman. She and her
children successfully participated
in many horse shows in Pennsylva-
nia, New York and New Jersey, gar-
nering many top awards. She main-
tained a small barn on her farm for
the show horses and continued to
support her children and grandchil-
dren in their equestrian endeavors
in her later years.
She took pride in providing her
extended family Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter dinners and
all were welcome.
She and her husband Ray cele-
brated their 50th wedding anniver-
sary in June 2007.
Judy spent every summer on
Long Lake, Maine, from1936 to her
death. She and her husband Ray re-
tired to Maine in 2003, razing the
1913 camp on Long Lake, built by
Judys grandparents J. Herbert and
Ida Brown, and erecting a perma-
nent home on the same site.
Judy enjoyed playing bridge in
Fryeburg and at the Bridgton Com-
munity Center. She was a member
of the Bridgton Literary Club.
Her ready laugh, story telling,
and empathy towards all will be
sorely missed.
She was preceded in death by her
twin sister Suzanna Lee in 2007 and
her sister Ellen Kurylowski in 1994
She is survived by her husband
Ray Jr., sister Josephine Killen and
husband Michael of California, her
children; Ray Turner III and wife
Lisbeth, Kimberly Ashton and hus-
bandDavid, andEric Turner; grand-
children, Cara Farina and husband
Robert, Morgan Fielding and hus-
band John, Emily Ashton, Aaron
Turner and Rachel Turner and
great-grandchildren, Isabella, Soph-
ia and Harrison Farina, Emma and
Molly Fielding.
A celebration of her life will be
held at the Bridgton United Metho-
dist Church at 11a.m. on November
26, 2011. Lunch will be served after
the service at the Church. Burial
will be at the discretion of the fam-
ily.
In lieu of flowers, donations in
her name can be made to the Bridg-
ton United Methodist Church, the
Bridgton Community Center or the
Luzerne County SPCA.
A memorial service will be held
locally in December. An announce-
ment will be made at that time.
Judith B. Turner
Oct. 8, 1935-Nov. 12, 2011
J
ean Welch, of Tunkhannock,
passed away November 13, 2011
at the Golden Living Center in
Tunkhannock.
BorninCentermoreland, in1929,
she was the daughter of the late Ho-
ward and Helen Stanley Goble.
She was preceded in death by her
sisters, HelenFoglia andElla Mikul-
ski, a sister-in-law, Loretta Goble,
and a nephew, David Goble.
Jean is survived by her precious
possessions, her beloved family, her
daughter Sally and husband Ronnie
Sands as well as her daughter, the
Rev. Lori Robinson; her son Jimmy
and wife Dawn Welch and also son
Jack and wife Karen Welch and the
pure joy of her life her grandchil-
dren, Stacey Peterson, Ronnie
Sands, Lucas and Derek Welch,
Shannon, Ben and Stacy Robinson
and Brett and Tyler Peterson; also,
great-grandson George James Pe-
terson; very dear to her heart her
brother Bob Goble Sr. of East Lem-
on and sister Dolores Yorke of Cal-
han, Colorado; as well as many cher-
ished nieces, nephews and her dear
friends.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 11 a.m. from the
Tunkhannock United Methodist
Church with Pastor Peter F. Gesch-
windner officiating. Friends and
family may call today from 4 to 7
p.m. at the Sheldon-Kukuchka Fu-
neral Home, Inc., 73 W. Tioga St.,
Tunkhannock.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Eatonville United
Methodist Church, P.O. Box 741,
Tunkhannock PA 18657, to the
Evans Falls United Methodist
Church, 306 SR 292 East, Tunkhan-
nock, PA18657, or to the Wyoming
County Food Pantry Inc., PO Box
165, Tunkhannock, PA18657.
For directions or online condo-
lences go to www.sheldonkukuch-
kafuneralhome.com.
Jean Welch
November 13, 2011
L
ois L. Whitlock, of West Pittston,
passed away Sunday, November
13, 2011inHighlandManor Nursing
Center, Exeter.
She was born in Binghamton,
NewYork, on March 3, 1927, daugh-
ter of the late Jess andRuthDaubert
Wertman. She was a graduate of
Meyers High School, Class of 1945.
Mrs. Whitlock was a member of the
First Congregational United
Churchof Christ, West Pittston, and
was amember of theSenippahClass
of the church. For many years she
was a Brownie Troop leader.
She was preceded in death by her
husband David Whitlock, on March
24, 2011.
Survived by daughters, Beth Sos-
ka and her husband, Peter, West
Pittston; Lynn Hughes and her hus-
band, Ron, Falls; five grandchildren
and nine great-grandchildren.
The family would like to thank
thestaff of HighlandManor Nursing
Center for thekindandcompassion-
ate care given to Mrs. Whitlock dur-
ing her illness.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 11 a.m.. at the Howell-
Lussi Funeral Home, 509 Wyoming
Avenue, West Pittston. Friends may
call at the funeral home Wednesday
from4 to 7 p.m. Interment will be in
West Pittston Cemetery.
Lois L. Whitlock
November 13, 2011
A
sweet and loving soul left the
earth on November, 12, 2011.
Michael Finiak was a former resi-
dent of Staton Hill in Wilkes-Barre
Township. For a number of years, he
was a resident of the Mountain Top
Senior Care.
Prior to his retirement, he was
employed in local restaurants and
the Wyoming Valley Shoe Industry.
Mike was known for his sociabil-
ity andenjoyedtellingandhearinga
good joke.
He will be most remembered for
his love and family and religious de-
votion. He was a faithful member of
Saints Peter and Paul Ukrainian Ca-
tholic Church, Wilkes-Barre. He will
be missed because he touched our
hearts and lives, and we had the
honor to know and love him.
Michael was precededindeathby
his mother Mary (Paslawsky ) Fin-
iak and his father Peter Finiak.
Surviving are his family, his sis-
ters, Anna Grzybowski, both of
Wilkes-Barre Township and Moun-
tain Top, and Mary Mundro, Moun-
tain Top Senior Care; his brothers,
Nicholas Finiak and his wife, Ann,
Stratford, Conn., andCharles Finiak
and his wife Kate, Garfield, N.J.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. from the Si-
mon S. Russin Funeral Home, 136
Maffett St., Plains, witha DivineLit-
urgywithRequiemServices at10:30
a.m. in Ss. Peter & Paul Ukrainian
Catholic Church, corner of North
River and Chestnut streets, Wilkes-
Barre, with the Rev. Orest Kundere-
vych as celebrant. Interment will
follow in the parish cemetery,
Plains. Friends may call from 5 to 7
p.m. today. A Parastas Service will
be held at 6 p.m.
Michael Finiak
November 12, 2011
J
ohn J. Hafferty, of Pittston,
passed away Sunday, November
13, 2011, in Kindred Hospital,
Wilkes-Barre.
Born in Pittston Township, he
was the son of the late John and Flo-
rence OMalley Hafferty.
He was a graduate of St. John the
Evangelist High School and served
in the U.S. Army during the Korean
Conflict.
He was employed for Nelson
Manufacturing in Wyoming for 28
years and also worked for Bechtel at
the power plant in Berwick and
Limerick and retired from General
Electric.
He was a member of St. John the
Evangelist Church, Pittston, its Ho-
ly Name Society and was an usher
for many years. He was a fourth de-
gree member of the Knights of Co-
lumbus JFK Council; a life member
of the Eagle Hose Company, Pitt-
ston; a member of the VFWof Avoca
and a member of the Teamsters.
He is survived by his wife of 56
years, Clara Cardascia Hafferty, son,
John J. Hafferty and his wife,
Adrienne, Alpharetta, Ga.; daugh-
ter, Colleen Walser and her hus-
band, Thad, Dallas; grandchildren
Deirdre Macbeth, Deland, Florida;
Sean Hafferty, Dupont; John Haffer-
ty, Manhattan, Kansas and Joe Wal-
ser, Dallas; great-grandchildren,
Aislin, Cora and Brielle Macbeth;
sister, Mary Catherine Vitale and
her husband, John, Pittston Town-
ship; brother-in-law, Felix Cardascia
and his wife, Theresa, Pittston;
niece, Vanessa Mayorowski and her
husband, Gale, Old Forge; great-
nieces, Aubre, Galen and Olivia
Mayorowski; nephew, Danny Car-
dascia and his wife, Dawn, Silver
Spring, Maryland.
Funeral services will be
Thursday, November 17, 2011
at 9 a.m. from the funeral home at
251 William Street, Pittston, with a
Mass of ChristianBurial at 9:30a.m.
in St. John the Evangelist Church,
Pittston. Entombment will beinMt.
Olivet Cemetery, Carverton.
Friends may call at 251 William
Street, Pittston, on Wednesday, No-
vember 16, 2011, from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 6 to 8 p.m.
Memorial donations may be
made to the Care and Concern Clin-
ic, William Street, Pittston, PA
18640.
Funeral arrangements are en-
trusted to the Peter J. Adonizio Fu-
neral Home.
Onlinecondolences maybemade
at www.peterjadoniziofuneral-
home.com.
John J. Hafferty
November 13, 2011
NICHOLAS P. PETERLIN SR.,
71, of Bear Creek Township,
passed away Saturday, November
12, 2011, in Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be
announcedinWednesdays edition
by Mark V. Yanaitis Funeral Home,
Plains.
M
arjorie A. Stolpe, 77, of Moun-
tain Top, passed away Mon-
day morning in Hospice Commu-
nity Care in Geisinger South
Wilkes-Barre.
Born in Exeter, she was the
daughter of the late Nick and He-
len (Kozlowski) Quava. A home-
maker, Marjoriewas anavidreader
and bowler and enjoyed playing
cards and scrabble. In the early
1950s, Marge was a supervisor at
Bell of New Jersey.
Preceding her in death, in addi-
tion to her parents, were her hus-
band David Stolpe, who died Nov.
2, 1973, and infant brother Ed-
ward.
Surviving are her three sons, Ri-
chard Stolpe and his wife Dariel of
Mountain Top; David Butch of
Freeland and Matthew of Notting-
ham, N.H.; two brothers, Russell
Quava and his wife Nancy of Son-
estown and Raymond and his wife
Jean (deceased) of Easton; sister
Helen Tobin and her husband Ri-
chard of Eagles Mere; grandchil-
dren, Janelle Gutkowski, Moun-
tain Top; Ryan Stolpe, William-
sport; Kristin Stolpe; five great-
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday from the Joseph E.
Lehman Funeral Home Inc., 403
Berwick St., White Haven, at 11
a.m. The Rev. Michele D. Kaufman
will officiate. Interment will follow
in Laurel Cemetery, White Haven.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 6 to 9 p.m.
Donations may be made to the
White Haven Food Bank, c/o John
Facenda, 1028 Foster Ave., White
Haven, PA 18661 or White Haven
Area community Library, P.O. Box
57, White Haven, PA18661.
Funeral arrangements are under
the direction of the Joseph E. Leh-
man Funeral Home Inc., White
Haven.
Marjorie A. Stolpe
November 14, 2011
Leroy Oscar Win-
slow, 69, of Rock
Street, Honey Pot
section of Nanti-
coke, passed
away Saturday,
November 12,
2011, at the
Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital.
Born on March 16, 1942, in Nanti-
coke, he was the son of the late Oscar
and Ethel Smith Winslow. He was a
graduate of Nanticoke High School.
Mr. Winslow was employed as a ma-
chine mechanic for Eberhard Faber
Corp., Mountain Top.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, the former Mary Ann Lacomy,
in 2000; his grandparents, Adolf and
Bertha Winslow and stepbrother,
Bobby Hunter.
Surviving are his daughter Leah,
with whom he resided; brother, Ri-
chard Winslow and his wife Mar-
ianne; stepbrothers, Larry andKenny
Hunter; stepsisters, Jeanne Gushok,
Betty Gushok, Gladis Yaskiewicz and
May Hoover; nieces and nephews.
A blessing service will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Stanley
S. Stegura Funeral Home, Inc., 614 S.
Hanover St., Nanticoke. Final inter-
ment will be in St. Marys Cemetery,
Wanamie. Friends may call today
from 5 to 7 p.m.
Leroy Oscar
Winslow
November 12, 2011
JOSEPH MAZUKA, 76, of
Brown Row, Wanamie, died Mon-
day morning, Nov. 15, 2011, at
Statesman Health and Rehabilita-
tion Center, Levittown.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe George A. Strish
Inc. Funeral Home, 211 West Main
Street, Glen Lyon.
JOHN S. HURREY, 72, of Lu-
zerne, passed away Monday, No-
vember 14, 2011, at the Depart-
ment of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, Plains Township.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from Gubbiotti Funeral
Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exe-
ter.
CHARLES MAY, 80, of Gillian
Street, Wilkes-Barre, died Sunday
evening, November 13, 2011, at
HospiceCareof VNA, St Lukes Vil-
la, Wilkes-Barre.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe Yeosock Funeral
Home, 40 S. Main Street, Plains.
LINDA M. PODOLSKY, 60, of
Snellville, Georgia, passed away
on Thursday, November 3, 2011.
Linda was preceded in death by
her parents andher sonDavid. She
is survived by her husband, David
Podolsky; daughter, Brooke Podol-
sky, bothof Snellville, Georgia; her
sister and brother-in-law, Barbara
and Salvatore Cometa, of Forty
Fort; and several nieces and a ne-
phew.
Funeral Mass and interment
were heldNovember11inGeorgia.
Online guest registry at www.ste-
wartfh.com.
A
nna F. Wanat, 81, of Wilkes-
Barre, and resident of Timber
Ridge, passed away Monday, No-
vember 14, 2011, at Geisinger
Wyoming Valley Medical Center,
Plains Township.
Born April 15, 1930, in Wilkes-
Barre, she was a loving daughter of
the late Dominick andAnna Fedorc-
zak Chernyl. She attended GAR
High School and was employed for
many years at Eberhard Faber,
Mountain Top. She was a member
of St. Andrew Parish, Wilkes-Barre.
She was an avid bingo player and
doll collector.
Anna was a loving wife, mother,
grandmother, great-grandmother,
sister and friend.
She was preceded in death by her
loving husband, Andrew Wanat, in
1986, and her brothers, TimTronov-
ich and Joseph Chernyl.
Survivingareher lovinganddedi-
cated daughter, Darlene Richards
and her husband Tom, Laflin; her
loving and dedicated sons, Rickey
Wanat, Wilkes-Barre, and Andy Wa-
nat and his fiance, Joan Luck, Hud-
son; her two loving grandchildren,
Kim Swan and her husband Bob,
Dupont, and Tommy Richards Jr.,
Kingston; her two loving great-
grandchildren, Ella and Ethan
Swan; her loving sister Elizabeth
Kostrab, Reading, and loving broth-
ers, Ted Chernyl and his wife Jean,
Luzerne, and Eddie Chernyl, Ply-
mouth; her loving in-laws and many
nieces and nephews and friends.
Anna will be deeply missed by
her children, grandchildren, great-
grandchildren, family and friends.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 9 a.m. from the Jendr-
zejewski Funeral Home, 21 N.
Meade St., Wilkes-Barre, with a
Mass of ChristianBurial at 9:30a.m.
at St. Andrew Parish at St. Patricks
Church, Parrish Street, Wilkes-
Barre. The Rev. James E. McGaha-
gan, pastor, will be celebrant. Inter-
ment will be inSt. Marys Cemetery,
Hanover Township. Friends may
call Wednesday from4to8p.m. The
family requests that all flowers be
omitted.
Anna F. Wanat
November 14, 2011
Edwin J. Nava-
lany, of Dupont,
passed away on
Saturday at the
VA Medical Cen-
ter, Plains Town-
ship.
Edwin was
born in Dupont,
onFeb. 15, 1928. Hewas thesonof the
late Martin&Mary StelmackNavala-
ny.
Edwin was a U.S. Army veteran of
the Korean War, serving from 1950-
1952, attaining the rank of sergeant.
He was awarded the Purple Heart for
wounds he received in Korea.
He was a member of the Amvets,
V.F.W. & the D.A.V.
Edwin was preceded in death by
his grandson, Brian Michael Nixon,
sisters, Christine Janesko and Ann
Yablonski, brother, Ralph Navalany.
Edwin is survived by his wife of 56
years the former Marie McKeown
Navalany, daughters, Patricia Laun-
hardt, Linda Cebula and husband Jo-
seph; Gail Marie Drzewicki, Ma-
ryann Hughes, son, Edwin J. Navala-
ny Jr. and wife Barbara; grandchil-
dren, Jennifer & Robert Nixon,
Edward, Richard, Ann Marie and
Chantel Cebula, Ashley and Paige
Navalany, Kimberly, Robert & Mat-
thew Tatarynw and Ryan Hughes,
great-grandchildren, Christian Nix-
on, Joseph Cebula, Robert Tatarynw
Jr., brother, John Navalany, several
nieces and nephews and his favorite
pets, Moira and Laddy.
A Memorial Mass will be held
at Holy Mother of Sorrows
Church, Wyoming Ave., Dupont, on
Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 at 11 a.m.
Funeral arrangements are by the
George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home,
105 N. Main St., Ashley.
Edwin J.
Navalany
November 12, 2011
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 11A
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The Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation spent a part of their Mon-
day afternoon at the Lackawanna
County Courthouse, according
to a source who spoke onthe con-
dition of anonymity.
Efforts to gather additional de-
tails about what the FBI may
have been searching for were un-
successful. Court Administrator
Ron Mackay, FBI Secret Agent
J.J. Klaver, and U.S. Attorneys
Office spokesperson Heidi
Havens each declined comment.
FBI at Lackawanna County Courthouse
HARRISBURG Govern-
ment aid to victims of Pennsylva-
nia summer flooding totaled
$187 million as of Monday.
More than 90,000 households
registered for help and disaster
assistance grants totaling $125.5
million have been paid out, said
Federal Emergency Management
Agency spokeswoman Susan So-
lomon.
The Small Business Adminis-
tration provided $61.4 million in
loans to1,620 renters, homeown-
ers and businesses in the state,
Solomon said.
Spokesman Cory Angell of the
Pennsylvania Emergency Man-
agement Agency said 18 people
died as a result of Tropical Storm
Lee and Hurricane Irene in late
August and September. The
back-to-back storms damaged or
destroyed thousands of homes
and businesses and set off flood-
ing of historic proportions in
eastern and central Pennsylva-
nia.
The deadline for applications
for relief has been extended until
Dec. 14.
Aid tally for Pa. flood victims is $187M
The Associated Press
In separate orders, the
state Supreme Court has
temporarily suspended
the law license of former
Luzerne County judge Mi-
chael Toole and accepted
former judge Michael Co-
nahans voluntary relin-
quishment of his law li-
cense.
The court, in a Nov. 10
order, accepted Conahans
resignation from the bar
effective Sept. 22. The
court also issued an order
that places Toole on tem-
porary suspension. The or-
der does not indicate the
length of that suspension.
The actions follow Co-
nahans andTooles convic-
tions on corruption charg-
es in 2010.
Conahan was sentenced
in September to17years
infederal prisonfor illegal-
ly accepting money from
the owner and the builder
of two juvenile detention
centers.
Toole was sentenced in
April to2years infederal
prison for illegally using
his position to influence
an insurance arbitration
case and for failing to re-
port $30,000 in income on
his taxes.
Former judge Mark Cia-
varella, Conahans former
co-defendant, was sen-
tenced in August to 28
years inprison. He is listed
as having retired from the
bar.
Pennsylvania top court
suspends Tooles license
Times Leader Staff
HARRISBURG A broad-ranging
bill to regulate natural gas drilling in
the state and impose a fee on drillers
won a key state Senate committees
support Monday but not the biparti-
san backing the high-ranking Repub-
lican sponsor had hoped for.
Only one Democrat on the Senate
Appropriations Committee crossed
party lines to join Republicans in en-
dorsing the proposal from Senate
President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati,
of Jefferson. The full Senate is expect-
ed to debate the bill as early as today.
Scarnati said his proposal, which
was months in the making, would im-
pose a fee of about 3 percent on gas
production that is expected to gener-
ate tens of millions of dollars a year to
help maintain roads and sewer sys-
tems in communities affected by the
drillingas well as statewide initiatives
that finance infrastructure improve-
ment, environmental cleanups and
open space.
The bill also would impose new en-
vironmental restrictions and desig-
nate the attorney generals office as
the initial arbiter of local zoning dis-
putes.
Democrats on the committee com-
plained that the tax was puny, the en-
vironmental requirements weak and
the zoning provision inadequate.
Sen. Lawrence M. Farnese, D-Phila-
delphia, said Pennsylvania has the
fourth-largest pocket of shale-imbed-
ded gas in the world and the compa-
nies drilling inthe lucrative Marcellus
Shale region can afford to pay much
more to the state.
These folks arent going any-
where, he said.
Panel OKs gas drill bill
Proposal to regulate drilling
passes Pa. Senate committee,
but not with bipartisan support.
The Associated Press
C M Y K
PAGE 12A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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We have to make sure the change
in the law is one that is effective.
TomCorbett
The Pennsylvania Governor predicted state law
mandating who must report sex assaults will be
strengthened following the Penn State scandal.
Theres a lot not taught
about U.S. independence
F
or the last 100 years students learned
Taxation without Representation as
the main reason for our independence.
In reality, this statement is only one out of
27 grievances in our Declaration for Inde-
pendence.
Abuse of Representative Powers was
mentioned 11 times more often. Abuse of
Military Powers was mentioned seven
times more often. Abuse of Judicial was
mentioned four times more often. Stirring
up Domestic Insurrection was mentioned
two times more often.
History has become nothing but dates,
places and events. No human achieve-
ments to speak of unless it somehow dealt
with economics. These fools cut out 95%
of what really happened in the first 200
years of American history!
Look at the mess we are in. People, you
are being lied to. Please study your history
and understand why America became the
greatest civilization ever. You do the math
and see how simple it really was! All you
have to do is look at all the charters of the
colonies and one thing will jump out and
smack you in the head. There is nothing
like the truth.
Bob Boyd
East Stroudsburg
A few truisms about
money and government
I
recently read these truisms in the
Lackawanna County Edition of Our
Town and would like to share them.
1. You cannot legislate the poor into
prosperity by legislating the wealthy out of
prosperity.
2. What one person receives without
working for, another person must work for
without receiving.
3. The government cannot give to any-
body anything that the government does
not first take from somebody else.
4. You cannot multiply the wealth by
dividing it.
5. When half of the people get the idea
that they do not have to work because the
other half is going to take care of them,
and when the other half gets the idea that
it does no good to work because somebody
else is going to get what they work for,
that is the beginning of the end of any
nation.
As I read these truisms I wondered
how many taxpayers would voluntarily
throw their own money away like the fed-
eral and state governments do.
Gary Bitler
Mill City
Heated dugouts would
improve game on field
T
he game of baseball would be im-
proved, if the playing field and the
racks in the dugouts were heated. The
racks would only have to be heated while
the game is being played and the weather
is cool.
This would make the bats more flexible
and less likely to break. This would make
the fielding gloves more flexible and easier
for the players to handle. And it would also
make the playing equipment softer and
there would be less likelihood for players
to get hurt. This would benefit all the
players batters and pitchers alike.
Jacob Corney
Edwardsville
MAIL BAG LETTERS FROM READERS
Letters to the editor must include the
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phone number for verification. Letters
should be no more than 250 words. We
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K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 13A
STEPHANIE Salavantis
may be a bright, young,
hardworking breath of fresh
air, but she enters the Lu-
zerne County District At-
torney post with some dark
stains she will need to
erase, thanks to an outrageously expensive
ad campaign that sought to smear and dis-
tort far more than enlighten.
Upon first hearing the radio ads I chuck-
led. The actors spoke in stereotypical drawls
and twangs that suggested Luzerne County
had seen a dramatic influx of western cow-
pokes or gentrified southern grandmothers.
Matlock had come to town to share his
folksy wisdom!
As the ads became more frequent, they
started to annoy, like those short internet
blurbs that repeat over and over again,
sometimes three or four times in a row,
when you try to watch a TV program online.
In the final weeks before the election, I
was appalled. Salavantis ads pounded the
airwaves with distortions and misleading
use of facts. It was a classic hatchet cam-
paign in the truest big-party style: Say it
often enough and loud enough, and people
start to believe, no matter how absurd.
Just to be clear, incumbent Jackie Musto
Carroll certainly should have been more
proactive in checking out irregularities in
then-Judge (now convicted felon) Mark
Ciavarellas juvenile court. This newspaper
reported Ciavarellas astounding rate of
outside placement in 2004. Someone should
have looked into it more, and Musto Carroll,
as assistant district attorney at the time,
was as good a someone as anybody.
But Musto Carroll wasnt the only one
who didnt act. Dave Lupas, then the DA,
did nothing. Other judges did nothing. At-
torneys, even those who sat in Ciavarellas
courtroom, did nothing. The states Judicial
Conduct Board did nothing after receiving
complaints about Ciavarellas partner in
slime, Michael Conahan. Scores of people
did nothing. Why?
Because Mark Ciavarella spoke of his
work with the passion of an evangelist at a
tent revival. I experienced it first hand. Ask
about his high placement rate, and he re-
sponded with infectious, convincing zeal.
When he said he did everything to help
those kids, the man could make the casual
observer a believer, and convince even the
most jaundiced cynic of his sincerity.
Musto Carroll has never been accused of
the slightest wrongdoing by law enforce-
ment officials who scoured the courthouse
to make their case. There is nothing known
that links her to the Ciavarella/Conahan
cesspool. And she certainly proved eager
and effective in the post-scandal effort to
both see justice done as the disaster un-
folded and prevent a recurrence.
Salavantis went for the high-powered
attack campaign for an obvious reason. She
has no prosecutorial or management experi-
ence that remotely qualified her for the job
she sought. And she had no name recog-
nition. Put her resume up against Must
Carroll and it was no contest. If she wanted
to win, the new kid on the block had to
smear her foe. And since she had nothing
concrete, she used innuendo and ephemera,
conjuring smoke where there was no fire.
How you campaign and how you perform
once elected can and often are two different
things. So Salavantis still gets the benefit of
the doubt as she steps into her new role.
But she needs to prove two things:
First, that she wont run the office the way
she ran the campaign. If she prosecutes
cases by trumping charges and distorting
evidence, well be in for a long stretch of
botched trials.
Second, that after spending so much and
benefiting from so many ads courtesy of the
GOP machine, she isnt beholden to that
party; she needs to show fierce independ-
ence, a hallmark of any good D.A.
And its obvious we need a good D.A. in a
county still reeling from nearly three years
of investigations and convictions in this,
Our Age of Endless Corruption.
Mark Guydish can be reached at 829-7161 or email
mguydish@timesleader.com
Salavantis needs to leave smear tactics, GOP behind
MARK GUYDISH
C O M M E N T A R Y
T
HANKSGIVING isnt
even here yet and al-
ready America is en-
during the first vol-
leys in the annual faux war on
Christmas.
The early Grinch candidate
this year is President Barack
Obama.
The presidents U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture instituted
a tax on Christmas trees or
so the conservative Heritage
Foundation would have you be-
lieve.
In fact, the so-called tax is
a self-imposed fee of 15 cents
per tree proposed by the very
industry that would pay it.
After watching the share of
natural Christmas tree sales
fall to artificial ones over the
past decade, a group of tree
farmers petitioned the USDA
in 2009 to start the process of
approving a promotional board
to help the industry sell its
goods. The National Christ-
mas Tree Association support-
ed the petition.
Such boards are authorized
by a law Congress passed in
1996. Two of the Senate co-
sponsors of that law were Mis-
souri Republicans John Ash-
croft and Christopher Kit
Bond.
Thats not quite the story re-
verberating in the right-wing
echo chamber more fixated on
fabricating conspiracy theories
to discredit Mr. Obama than
seeking the truth. Thats why
Rich Dungey, who does public
relations for the tree associ-
ation, is inundated with calls
and emails this week wonder-
ing why hes the Grinch who
taxed Christmas.
The whole "War on Christ-
mas" is an apparition, a ghost if
you will. Mr. Dungeys group
merely is trying to sell more
Christmas trees, using a law
Republicans passed to benefit
industry. Following recent pat-
terns, unfortunately, the Oba-
ma administration collapsed
like a Charlie BrownChristmas
tree weighed down by too
many ornaments. Its putting a
hold on the fee the industry
hoped would invigorate the
slumping real Christmas tree
market.
Bah, humbug.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
OTHER OPINION: TREE TAX
The phony war
on Christmas
T
HE NUMBER seems a
bit embarrassing.
Twenty-ninemunicipal
elected offices in Lu-
zerne County were not filled by
rigorous competitive races be-
tween rivals touting expertise.
No, they were filled by write-
invotes, typically promptedby a
lack of candidates on the ballot.
Of those 29 races, 12 were won
by people who got a single vote.
Think of that. A dozen newly
elected officials in Luzerne
County got into office by win-
ning one vote.
Most of these posts 21
were municipal auditors, a job
that chronicallyfails toattract in-
terest.
One of the write-in winners
was Jeddo mayor, which isnt a
surprise for the little borough
that could. Jeddo barely covers
one-third square mile, and the
2010 census listed the popula-
tion at a scant 98 people down
from 144 in 2000. It constantly
seems like the municipality will
dissolve, but the feisty residents
persist. Their determined inde-
pendence has made Jeddo elec-
tion stories a quadrennial media
favorite.
But the write-in winners also
included four council seats, two
township supervisors, and a
school board member.
In Conyngham borough,
where one of four open council
seats was up for grabs through
write-ins, no one got enough
votes to win the post, according
toElectionBureauDirector Leo-
nard Piazza.
Intheracefor Northwest Area
School Board, former board
member Michael Kriedler wona
special two-year seat with 50
write-invotes while Gary Bober-
ick, with 811 votes, and Jeff Pie-
rontoni, with 709, lost their bids
for four-year seats. Boberick and
Pierontoni wereamongsevenon
the ballot for four-year seats; no
onewasontheballot for thetwo-
year seat.
Surely there are lessons here.
On the plus side, it shows any-
one really can get elected when
the stars align; no need for big-
buck campaigns.
It certainly suggests the state
shouldrevisit the mandatedmu-
nicipal auditor position. Perhaps
it is evidence that the countyhas
too many municipalities, and
talk of mergers should begin
anew. Or maybe it is just more
proof of complacency regarding
our right to guide our owndesti-
nies.
At the very least, these num-
bers should encourage more
people to participate in the next
election. Dont think of those 29
write-in wins as an embarrass-
ment.
Think of them as opportuni-
ties.
OUR OPINION: CANDIDATES
Next time around,
lets fill the ballot
QUOTE OF THE DAY
PRASHANT SHITUT
PresidentImpressions Media
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK JONES
Editorial Page Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
C M Y K
PAGE 14A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
PITTSBURGHAyouthcharityatthe
center of the child sex abuse charges
against former Penn State assistant foot-
ball coach Jerry Sandusky received dona-
tions inrecent years fromhundreds of cor-
porations, communitygroups andindivid-
uals includingthe judge whoarraigned
Sandusky earlier this month and Penn
State itself.
The charity, The Second Mile, an-
nouncedMondayithadacceptedtheresig-
nation of its president, Jack Raykovitz,
who said he hoped his departure would
help restore faith in its mission. The char-
ity also announced it had hired Philadel-
phias longtimedistrict attorneyas its new
general counsel.
Raykovitz, a practicing psychologist,
hadledthe charity, whichwas foundedby
Sanduskyin1977, for28years. Hisresigna-
tionwas acceptedSunday.
Raykovitzhadtestifiedbeforeagrandju-
ry that recommended indicting Sandusky
on child abuse charges. The panel said
Sandusky found his victims through the
charitys programs.
The grand jury report called Sandusky
the charitys primary fundraiser, and The
Second Miles annual reports show that
somedonationscamefromentitiesnowin-
volvedinthe scandal.
Penn State donated money even after
high-ranking university officials were told
that Sandusky had been seen sexually as-
saulting a boy on campus. Penn State do-
nated between $1,000 and $1,999 to The
SecondMile in2009, andits Altoona cam-
pus donated between $2,000 and $4,999
that year.
Another donor was State College Dis-
trict Judge Leslie A. Dutchcot, who set
Sanduskysbail earlierthismonth. Sheand
her husband donated between $500 and
$999 to The Second Mile in 2009, and she
volunteeredforthegroup, accordingtoan-
nual reports andher website.
The judge set bail for Sandusky at
$100,000unsecuredmeaninghedidnot
have to post collateral to be freed but
would have to post $100,000 if he ever
failedto showup for a hearing.
Major companies andtheir foundations
also have given to The Second Mile. Be-
tween2008and2010, theBankof America
Charitable Foundation, Highmark Foun-
dation, The Hershey Co. and State Farm
CompaniesFoundationall gave$50,000or
more to the charity.
Other donors includedU.S. Steel Corp.,
the University of Pittsburgh, The Pepsi
Bottling Group, Frito-Lay, the Pa. School
Counselors Association, local Walmarts
andnewspapers.
Raykovitz said in a statement Monday
that he hopes his resignation would mark
the beginning of a restoration of faith in
the community of volunteers and staff at
The SecondMile.
TaxformsindicatethatRaykovitzswife,
Katherine Genovese, was executive vice
president of The Second Mile. She has
beenwiththegroupsince1984. Itsunclear
if she still works at the charity, as the staff
biography page has been removed from
the website.
According to a 2009 tax return, Rayko-
vitzreceivedabout$133,000fromTheSec-
ondMile that year andGenovese received
about $100,000.
Sandusky is accused of assaulting eight
boys, some on Penn State property, over a
15-year span.
Penn State athletic director TimCurley
and senior vice president Gary Schultz
were charged with perjury related to the
case. They have denied wrongdoing and
havelefttheiruniversityposts. Otherswho
claimthey sawor heardabout childabuse
toldonlytheir immediatesupervisors, not
police, according to a grandjury report.
Sanduskycontinues tocollect a$59,000
annual pension and received a $148,000
lumpsumwhenheretiredfromtheuniver-
sityin1999, accordingtothePatriot-News
of Harrisburg. Schultz collects more than
$330,000 yearly from his pension and re-
ceived a $442,000 lump payment upon re-
tirement in2009, thenewspaper reported.
StateSen. KimWardsaidMondaysheis
writingabill thatwouldrequireall employ-
ees of colleges and universities to report
suspected child abuse to the person in
charge of the institutionandto ChildLine,
a childabuse reporting hotline.
Rep. KevinBoyle, D- Philadelphia, intro-
duced a bill that would require that all
child-abuse allegations be reported direct-
ly to police, something Ward said she
fearedcouldleadto false charges.
The current system, Boyle said, is
clearly inadequate and failed the alleged
victims inthe PennState case.
Avote is expected this week in a House
committeeonabill whosetimingiscoinci-
dental but that would apply to the Penn
State case.
Thebill proposedbyRep. MikeVereb, R-
Montgomery, would create an offense of
sexual assault byasportsofficial includ-
ingclubcoachesandreferees, andemploy-
ees of nonprofits like the SecondMile that
engage insports activities.
Vereb said the law would establish the
category of statutory rape for those be-
tweenages16and18. Currently, thelawap-
plies only to anyone under16.
Head of The Second Mile charity resigns
The organization also received
donations from Penn State and the
judge who arraigned Jerry Sandusky.
By KEVIN BEGOS
Associated Press
State Sen. Kim Ward said Monday she is writing a bill that
would require all employees of colleges and universities to
report suspected child abuse to the person in charge of the
institution and to ChildLine, a child abuse reporting hotline.
Graham Spanier were ousted
from their jobs for not doing
enough after Sandusky was ac-
cused of assaulting a young boy
in the showers of the campus
football complex in 2002. Pater-
no is not the target of any legal
investigation, but he has conced-
ed he should have done more.
Spanier, who remains a tenured
member of the faculty, has said
he would have reported a crime
if hed suspected one had been
committed.
The interview with
Costas was Sandus-
kys first public com-
ment on the charges.
He had previously
maintained his inno-
cence through his at-
torney.
A spokesman for
Pennsylvania Attor-
ney General Linda
Kelly declined to
comment on the in-
terview, citing the ac-
tive investigation.
Sanduskys re-
marks came the night his attor-
ney, Joe Amendola, told CNN
that his client was just behaving
like a jock.
Jerry Sandusky is a big over-
grown kid, Amendola said.
Hes a jock, and for anybody
whos ever played sports, you get
showers after you work out. ...
What Im being told happened is
that Jerry was in the shower
with this kid, the kid was mess-
ing around, having a good time,
you had (former graduate assist-
ant and now wide receivers
coach Mike) McQueary come in
and see that. He felt uncomfort-
able.
McQueary told a grand jury
he saw Sandusky sodomizing a
boy about 10 years old in a show-
er at the Nittany Lions practice
center in March 2002. McQue-
ary did not go to police but in-
stead told Paterno, Curley and
Schultz, although it is unclear
how detailed a description he
gave. Schultz, in turn, notified
Spanier.
Amendola accused the attor-
ney generals office of having
thrown everything they can
throw up against the wall. He
said some of the allegations,
such as putting a hand on a boys
knee, do not constitute criminal
conduct and other cases include
no direct complaint by the boy.
They have other people who
are saying they saw something,
but they dont have actual peo-
ple saying, This is what Jerry
did to me, he said. Were work-
ing to find those people, and
when the time comes, and if we
are able to do that, we think this
whole case will change dramat-
ically.
The Associated Press has
made several efforts to reach
Sandusky by
phone and
through his attor-
ney, but messages
havent been re-
turned. The AP al-
so knocked on
Sanduskys door
and left messages
at least three
times over the
past week.
When Sandusky
retired in 1999, at
just 55, he cited
his desire to de-
vote more time to
The Second Mile, a charity he
founded in 1977 to help at-risk
kids. According to the grand ju-
ry report, however, Sandusky
was a sexual predator who used
the charity and his Penn State
connections to prey on young
boys.
Though he was not particular-
ly close with Paterno, he re-
mained a familiar sight around
the Penn State football complex.
He was given an office in the
East Area Locker building,
across the street from the foot-
ball building, as part of his re-
tirement package, and would
take Second Mile kids around
the football facilities.
The Sandusky interview came
on a day when it was announced
the president of The Second
Mile had resigned. Jack Rayko-
vitz, a practicing psychologist
who had led the group for 28
years, said he hoped his resigna-
tion, accepted Sunday, would
help restore faith in the groups
mission. The Second Mile also
announced it had hired Philadel-
phias longtime district attorney
as its new general counsel.
SANDUSKY
Continued from Page 1A
... I could say that I
have done some of
those things, Sand-
usky said. I have
horsed around with
kids. I have showered
after workouts. I have
hugged them, and I
have touched their
legs without intent of
sexual contact.
Criticism over Jerry Sandus-
kys release with $100,000 unse-
cured bail and an online resume
for the judge who set that bail
has raised questions of whether
she had a conflict of interest.
However, District Judge Leslie
Dutchcot isnt talking and nei-
ther is the Attorney Generals of-
fice.
Judges are not allowed to
comment on cases, Dutchcot
said when reached at home
about the potential conflict. We
cant comment on anything
thats pending in front of us.
On a previous version of the
website for Goodall & Yurchak
in State College, for whom
Dutchcot serves as counsel, The
Second Mile was listed among
her volunteer activities.
That is the nonprofit organiza-
tion founded by Sandusky in
1977 to serve area youth. Sand-
usky faces 40 counts related to
alleged sexual abuse of eight
boys over a 15-year period.
The version of the Goodall &
Yurchak site that can be viewed
today does not include that in-
formation.
Dutchcots profile does say she
was named State College Jay-
cees Lawyer of the Year in 2005.
That organization holds picnics
for The Second Miles children at
the conclusion of summer
camps.
Nils Frederiksen, spokesman
for the state Attorney Generals
office, would not answer ques-
tions related to the question of a
potential conflict.
Its not appropriate for us to
be discussing Judge Dutchcot at
this time, he said.
Sandusky was released on
$100,000 unsecured bail, and or-
dered not to have contact with
minors. The Attorney Generals
office had requested a moneta-
ry, cash bail; a high bail, Frede-
riksen said.
We didnt specify the
amount, he said. We also had
requested electronic monitoring
and the surrender of his pass-
port.
The office also asked that
Sandusky not have unsupervised
contact with minors.
Sanduskys attorney, Joe
Amendola, argued for lower bail,
saying that Sandusky is not a
flight risk, nor is he a danger to
the community. Amendola noted
that Sandusky had been aware of
the grand jury investigation for
two years, and had appeared to
face charges as soon as he was
notified that they would be filed.
Questions of possible conflict raised regarding district judge who set Sanduskys bail
Leslie Dutchcot was volunteer
at Second Mile foundation,
founded by Sandusky.
By JESSICA VANDERKOLK
Centre Daily Times
MCT PHOTO
EX-PSU assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, right, walks
with attorney Joseph L. Amendola on Saturday in State College.
The growing scandal involving allegations of sexual abuse of boys by a former Penn State assistant
coach, as well as alleged efforts to cover up the abuse, threatenes to tarnish the image of the school
and its storied football program.
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011
timesleader.com
T
hose two broken ribs Michael
Vick suffered Sunday arent the
only things fractured around
the Philadelphia Eagles.
Their whole system is wrecked
now, along with their season.
Its why Eagles head coach Andy
Reid has to go.
He has lost a lot more than six
games this year.
Reid lost direction, lost the locker
room and lost discipline with his
team, as much as he tried to instill it
by playing the tough guy and sus-
pending star wide receiver DeSean
Jackson against the Arizona Cardinals.
That the game turned into another
fourth-quarter loss for the Eagles was
only a by-product of the disarray.
Weve all got killer instinct in us,
said Eagles cornerback Asante Sa-
muel, after the Eagles were beaten in
the end, 21-17, by the floundering
Arizona Cardinals. But were not
showing it on the field.
What the Eagles do put on display
these days is an incredible aloofness
about attention to detail.
Nobody on Philadelphias staff sus-
pected something might be wrong
with Vick when his passes were land-
ing within 10 yards of his targets in
the fourth quarter?
Nobody on the Eagles defense fig-
ured it might be a good thing to ac-
tually cover Larry Fitzgerald, whos
only the best wide receiver in the
game, when the game was on the
line?
Nobody could stop the critical pe-
nalties that keep piling up and puni-
shing the Eagles every game?
Its been a myriad of different
things, Eagles wide receiver Jason
Avant said. You cant just put it on
one thing.
Oh yes you can.
The head coach.
Hes the one whos been saying for
weeks he needs to do a better job.
Under his watch, the 3-6 Eagles
have only gotten worse.
So Reids the one who should pay
for turning an All-Star collection of
talent into a team tied for last place
in the NFC East, with little hope of
making the playoffs.
The Eagles are 1-4 at home, have
blown five fourth-quarter leads this
season, and could be eliminated from
the postseason by Thanksgiving.
No, were not falling apart, Eagles
linebacker Akeem Jordan said.
Theyre not exactly coming togeth-
er, either.
Big-name free agent cornerback
Nnamdi Asomugha lined up on the
other side of the field from Fitzgerald
on the biggest play of the day.
Is there no direction around the
Eagles anymore?
Its tough for everybody, said Juan
Castillo, the Eagles former offensive
line coach whos proving he should
never have been named defensive
coordinator this season.
Its tough for Philadelphia fans to
watch. Normally die-hard loyalists,
they swarmed to the exits in middle
of the fourth quarter during a game
that was tied 14-14 at the time.
Its time Reid goes out the door,
too.
He couldnt recognize Vick suffered
two broken ribs on the second play of
the game, yet stayed around to miss
open receivers badly while com-
pleting just 16 of 34 passes.
Reid is the one who told his game-
breaker Jackson to stay home Sunday
after missing a special teams meeting
earlier in the week. Nobody gets sus-
pended for skipping special teams
meetings.
Its obvious Reid was trying to send
a message to the Eagles.
Nobodys bigger than the football
team, Reid said.
Starting with the head coach.
PAUL SOKOLOSKI
O P I N I O N
Leader of the
broken system
must make exit
Paul Sokoloski is a Times Leader sports
columnist. You may reach him at 970-7109 or
email him at psokoloski@timesleader.com.
Joe Paterno and Amos Alonzo Stagg
will remain tied in the record books, but
they will no longer be linked together
on the Big Tens new championship tro-
phy.
The conference announced Monday
that Paternos name would be removed
from the trophy given to the winner of
the just-established Big Ten champion-
ship game.
It will nowbe known as just the Stagg
Championship Trophy, after the former
long-timecoachat theUniversityof Chi-
cago.
We believe that it would be inappro-
priate tokeepJoe Paternos name onthe
trophy at this time, Big Ten commis-
sioner Jim Delany said in a statement.
The trophy and its namesake are in-
tended to be celebratory and aspiration-
al, not controversial. We believe that its
important to keep the focus on the play-
ers and the teams that will be compet-
ing in the inaugural championship
game.
The trophy will be presented to the
winner of that that first Big Ten title
game on Dec. 3 at Lucas Oil Stadium in
Indianapolis. PennState remains infirst
place of the Leaders Division for a spot
in the contest.
Before his career came to a stunning
end last week, Paterno was set to sur-
pass Stagg for the most games coached
in Division I football history. Both fin-
ished at 548 games.
Paterno was fired by Penn State
Wednesday night inthe wake of a sexual
abuse scandal surrounding the universi-
ty and its football program.
The 84-year-old former coach does
not face criminal charges but said he
P S U F O O T B A L L
Big Ten drops Paterno from trophy
Conference renames trophy given to
leagues top team the Stagg
Championship Trophy.
By DEREK LEVARSE
dlevarse@timesleader.com
See STAGG, Page 3B
EMMAUS The defending
state champions have been an
ever-evolving squad this sea-
son.
Wyoming Seminary retooled
its lineup after last years se-
niors graduated, then battled
injuries, illnesses and even
Mother Nature this season to
get back to the states final four.
For all the changes the Blue
Knights have faced, one aspect
of their
game has re-
mained the
same.
Juniors
Emily Gran-
ger, Devin
Holmes and
Bridget
McMullan have been a constant
defensive unit for coach Karen
Klassner, and have helped the
Blue Knights to a 16-5-2 record.
Were the one group thats
been together all season,
Granger said. The forwards
and the mids have changed
players and positions.
Weve worked together since
August, Holmes said. We
know what we are supposed to
P I A A F I E L D H O C K E Y
Consistent
defense
emerging
Blue Knights defensive unit
has been leading team in
defense of state crown.
By JOHN MEDEIROS
jmedeiros@timesleader.com
See KNIGHTS, Page 3B
UP NEXT
Seminary
vs. Palmyra
6 p.m. today
Emmaus
High School
DALLAS The Dallas School
Board unanimously accepted the
resignation of boys basketball
coach Ted Jackson Jr. on Monday
night, just four days before the of-
ficial start of practice.
Jackson Jr. handed in his resig-
nation on Saturday, said board
president Dr. Bruce Goeringer.
Jackson Jr. didnt attend the
meetinganddidnt returna mess-
age left for him Monday night.
Jackson Jr. is also an assistant
football coach at the school un-
der his father, Ted Jackson. The
younger Jackson was suspended
fromcoaching for a week prior to
the Oct. 22 game with Pocono
Mountain East. Superintendent
Frank Galicki said at the time
that Jackson Jr. was suspended
B OY S B A S K E T B A L L
Dallas coach
Jackson Jr.
steps down
His resignation was accepted
just four days before practice
is slated to start.
By JOHN ERZAR
jerzar@timesleader.com
See DALLAS, Page 3B
NEW YORK NBA players delivered
a resounding but risky response to one
more ultimatumfromNBACommission-
er David Stern: See you in court.
The players association rejected the
leagues latest proposal for a new labor
deal Monday and began disbanding, pav-
ing the way for a lawsuit that throws the
season in jeopardy.
Negotiating went nowhere, so nowthe
union is going away.
And Stern said nuclear winter is
coming.
Were prepared to file this antitrust ac-
tion against the NBA, union executive
director Billy Hunter said. Thats the
best situation where players can get their
due process.
And thats a tragedy as far as Stern is
concerned.
It looks likethe2011-12seasonis really
in jeopardy, Stern said in an interview
aired on ESPN. Its just a big charade. To
do it now, the union is ratcheting up I
guess to see if they can scare the NBA
owners or something. Thats not happen-
ing.
Hunter said players were not prepared
to agree to Sterns ultimatum to accept
the current proposal or face a worse one,
sayingtheythought it was extremelyun-
fair. And theyre aware what this battle
might cost them.
We understand the consequences of
potentially missing the season; we under-
stand the consequences that players
could potentially face if things dont go
our way, but its a risk worth taking,
union vice president Maurice Evans said.
Its the right move to do.
But its risky.
Hunter said all players will be repre-
sented in a class-action suit against the
NBAby attorneys Jeffrey Kessler and Da-
vid Boies who were on opposite sides
of the NFL labor dispute, Kessler work-
ing for the players, Boies for the league.
Mr. Kessler got his way, and were
about to go into the nuclear winter of the
NBA, SterntoldESPN. If I were a player
... I would be wondering what it is that
Billy Hunter just did.
The league already has filed a pre-emp-
NBA LOCKOUT
Risky behavior
AP PHOTO
New Orleans Hornets Chris Paul, left, and New York Knicks Carmelo Anthony talk after a meeting of the players union in
New York, Monday. The NBA players rejected the leagues latest offer and have begun the process to disband the union.
Season could be in jeopardy after rejection
By BRIAN MAHONEY
AP Basketball Writer
See NBA, Page 4B
GREEN BAY, Wis.
AaronRodgersthrewfour
touchdown passes, Ran-
dall Cobb rana punt back
80 yards for a score and
the Green Bay Packers
defense showed it can
takecontrol of agameina
45-7victoryover theMin-
nesota Vikings on Mon-
daynight.
The Packers ran their
record to 9-0 and remain
the NFLs lone unbeaten
team.
A strong Vikings pass
rush didnt force any uncharacteristic mis-
takes from Rodgers, who was 23 of 30 for
250yards without aninterception. Rodgers
threwa pair of touchdown passes to Jordy
N F L
Rodgers throws 4 touchdowns as Packers cruise
AP PHOTO
THe Green Bay Packers Jermichael Finley reacts to a first down reception dur-
ing the first half of an NFL game against the Minnesota Vikings Monday in Green
Bay, Wis.
By CHRIS JENKINS
AP Sports Writer
See PACKERS, Page 3B
45
PACKERS
7
VIKINGS
C M Y K

PAGE 2B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com


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Stevenson on Saturday.
Tivald carried the ball a sea-
son-high 40 times for a career-
best 184 yards and two touch-
downs. The two scores, both
from two yards out, gave Tivald
nine touchdowns for the season
and 24 scores for his career at
Wilkes. He finishes his career
with 144 points, tied for ninth
all-time in school history with
Al Nichols.
Tivald concludes his fine
career ranking fifth on Wilkes
all-time rushing list with 2,493
yards.
Tivald ran for 938 yards this
season and finished as the
MACs second leading rusher
going for 104.2 yards per game.
As a team, the Colonels ended
the year as the top rushing
offense with 242.8 yards per-
game.
FIELD HOCKEY
Quinones selected for
honor
Jenera Quinones, a Kings
standout, has received the big-
gest honor of her career as she
he has been selected to play in
the 2011 National Field Hockey
Coaches Association Division III
Senior All-Star Game on Sat-
urday at Nichols College in
Dudley, Mass.
Quinones, a Meyers grad,
recently concluded one of the
finest careers in Kings history
being named the Freedom Con-
ference Player of the Year for
the second straight.
A three-time first-team All-
Freedom Conference choice and
a two-time NFHCA All-Regional
selection, Quinones led the
conference in scoring for the
second consecutive season,
totaling 56 points on 22 goals
and 12 assists.
With 12 assists on the year,
Quinones set a new Kings sin-
gle-season record and her 56
points ranks as the fourth-high-
est season total in school histo-
ry. Quinones also wrapped up
her career with 157 total points
good for second on Kings all-
time list. Her 63 goals and 31
assists are also second in Kings
history.
FOOTBALL
Wilkes Tivald lauded
Wilkes senior Zach Tivald was
named to the MAC weekly hon-
or roll after the teams win over
LOCAL
COLLEGE ATHLETICS MEETINGS
Basketball Rules Interpretation
Meeting will be held this Wednes-
day, Nov. 16th at the Holy Family
School in Kingston, the former
Bishop OReilly High School, at 7
p.m. Jay Rowan, rules interpreter
for the Luzerne County Chapter,
will preside. This is a mandatory
meeting for all officials and coach-
es in the Wyoming Valley. For more
information call Harry Kaskey at
570-696-3232.
GAR Soccer Booster Club will hold a
meeting this Wednesday at 7 p.m.
at Mags Halftime Pub on Moyallen
St. in Wilkes-Barre.
Hanover Area Cheerleading Booster
Club will hold their next meeting
on Monday, Nov. 21st at 7 p.m. at
the high school cafeteria.
Nanticoke Little League will meet
Thursday, Nov. 17th at the West
Side Fieldhouse regarding the
merger with Newport Little
League. All parents, coaches, and
managers from both sides are
urged to attend. Any questions,
please contact Wade at 570-735-
1089.
The Crestwood Football Booster
Club will hold their next meeting
on Thursday, Dec. 8th at 7 p.m. at
Kings Restaurant. They will be
nominating and electing new
officers for the upcoming year. Any
questions, please call Tony at
430-7571.
The Hanover Area Girls Basketball
Booster Club will hold its monthly
meeting TODAY at 6:30 p.m. at the
Hanover Area Jr/Sr High School.
Plans for the upcoming season will
be discussed. All parents of any
girl basketball player from grades
7-12 are invited and encouraged to
attend.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
The Stan Waleski Black Friday
Basketball Camp is accepting
registrations for the camp to be
held at the St. Josephs Oblates
gym in Laflin on Nov. 25 from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. for boys and girls in
grades 2 through 8. The camp
stresses fundamentals, skills,
competitions, team play and fun
with all players receiving a T-shirt
and certificate. For camp informa-
tion, call Coach Waleski at 457-
1206 or Coach LoBrutto at 654-
8030. In addition, interested
players can e-mail stanwaleski@ya-
hoo.com.
UPCOMING EVENTS
The Wyoming Area vs. GAR Sec-
ond-Round Playoffs Game will
have tickets on sale at the Wyom-
ing Area Secondary Center on
Wednesday, Nov. 16th through
Friday Nov. 18th from 9 a.m. to 11
a.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. daily.
Cost is $4 per student and $6 for
adults.
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, emailed to
tlsports@timesleader.com or dropped
off at the Times Leader or mailed to
Times Leader, c/o Sports, 15 N, Main
St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-0250.
BUL L E T I N BOARD
NFL
Favorite Points Underdog
Thursday
Jets 4.5 BRONCOS
Sunday
FALCONS 6 Titans
DOLPHINS 2 Bills
RAVENS 7 Bengals
Jaguars 1 BROWNS
VIKINGS NL Raiders
LIONS 7 Panthers
PACKERS NL Bucs
Cowboys 8 REDSKINS
49ERS 9.5 Cards
RAMS 2.5 Seahawks
BEARS 4 Chargers
GIANTS NL Eagles
Monday
PATRIOTS NL Chiefs
Bye week: Texans, Colts, Saints, Steelers.
College Football
Favorite Points Underdog
NO ILLINOIS 17 Ball St
Wednesday
MIAMI-OHIO 2 W Michigan
Ohio U 6.5 BOWLING GREEN
Thursday
VA TECH 11 N Carolina
Marshall 12 MEMPHIS
So Miss 23 UAB
Friday
Toledo 14.5 C MICHIGAN
Oklahoma St 26 IOWA ST
Saturday
NORTHWESTERN 16 Minnesota
Wisconsin 14 ILLINOIS
Iowa 2.5 PURDUE
MICHIGAN ST 28.5 Indiana
CONNECTICUT PK Louisville
Ga Tech 10 DUKE
WAKE FOREST 11 Maryland
FLORIDA ST 17 Virginia
Clemson 9 NC STATE
BUFFALO 11.5 Akron
GEORGIA 28.5 Kentucky
Vanderbilt 1 TENNESSEE
MISSOURI 17.5 Texas Tech
KENT ST 3.5 E Michigan
TEMPLE 13 Army
WYOMING 24.5 New Mexico
BYU 23 New Mexico St
Tulsa 13.5 UTEP
RICE 13 Tulane
TEXAS A&M 30.5 Kansas
Utah 4 WASHINGTON ST
Lsu 29 MISSISSIPPI
TCU 33 Colorado St
Washington 3.5 OREGON ST
ARIZONA ST 11 Arizona
STANFORD 20 California
MICHIGAN 2.5 Nebraska
UCLA 10 Colorado
C Florida 7 E CAROLINA
OHIO ST 6.5 Penn St
Cincinnati 3 RUTGERS
TEXAS 9 Kansas St
NOTRE DAME 24 Boston Coll
Navy 5 SAN JOSE ST
NEVADA 7 La Tech
Utah St 9 IDAHO
AIR FORCE 23 Unlv
HOUSTON 20 Smu
l-ARKANSAS 13 Miss St
Miami-Fla 1 S FLORIDA
Oklahoma 14 BAYLOR
OREGON 15 Usc
Boise St 16.5 SAN DIEGO ST
HAWAII 6 Fresno St.
TROY 11 Fla Atlantic
W Kentucky 3 NORTH TEXAS
UL-MONROE 1 Florida Intl
Arkansas St 12 MID TENN ST
College Basketball
Favorite Points Underdog
HAWAII 12.5 CS-Northridge
W VIRGINIA 9 Kent St
BAYLOR 8.5 San Diego St.
TEXAS 15 Rhode Island
MIAMI-FLORIDA 7.5 Rutgers
Dayton 3 MIAMI-OHIO
VILLANOVA 15.5 LaSalle
Charlotte 1.5 C MICHIGAN
m-Duke 5 Michigan St
Missouri St 3.5 ARKANSAS ST
OHIO ST 10 Florida
Saint Louis 5.5 SO ILLINOIS
Iowa St 2.5 DRAKE
ARIZONA ST 13.5 Pepperdine
m-Kentucky 5.5 Kansas
CAL-SANTA BARB 5 Santa Clara
UCLA 10.5 Middle Tenn St
NIT Tipoff
Midwest Regional
OKLAHOMA ST 23 Ark-Pine Bluff
Oral Roberts NL TX-San Antonio
Drexel 1 RIDER
CHARLESTON 10.5 Morehead St
MEMPHIS 5 Belmont
CINCINNATI 25 Jackville St
S Carolina 5.5 ELON
BUTLER 15 Tenn-Chatt
WYOMING 5.5 No Colorado
Utah St 1.5 WEBER ST
CALIFORNIA 12 Austin Peay
NHL
Favorite Odds Underdog
BRUINS -$200 Devils
MAPLE LEAFS -$110 Coyotes
Rangers -$150 ISLANDERS
Wild -$135 BLUE JACKETS
PENGUINS -$185 Avalanche
Red Wings -$110 BLUES
Capitals -$140 PREDATORS
STARS -$135 Panthers
FLAMES -$155 Senators
AME RI C A S L I NE
By Roxy Roxborough
NO LINE REPORT: On the NFL board, there is no line on the Eagles - Giants game
due to Philadelphia QB Michael Vick (questionable); there is no line on the Chiefs -
Patriots game due to Kansas City QB Matt Cassel (doubtful).
All other no line games are for teams that played last night.
For the latest odds & scores, check us out at www.americasline.com.
BOXING REPORT: In the WBA junior middleweight title fight on December 3 at
Madison Square Garden, Miguel Cotto is -$180 vs. Antonio Margarito at +$160. -
W H A T S O N T V
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
6 a.m.
ESPN Drexel at Rider
8 a.m.
ESPN Morehead St. at Coll. of Charleston
10 a.m.
ESPN Kent St. at West Virginia
Noon
ESPN Belmont at Memphis
2 p.m.
ESPN San Diego St. at Baylor
4 p.m.
ESPN Rhode Island at Texas
7 p.m.
ESPN Duke vs. Michigan St., at New York
8 p.m.
ESPN2 Florida at Ohio St.
9 p.m.
ESPN Kentucky vs. Kansas, at New York
10 p.m.
ESPN2 Austin Peay at California
NHL HOCKEY
7 p.m.
MSG, PLUS N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders
PLUS2 --- New Jersey at Boston
7:30 p.m.
VERSUS Colorado at Pittsburgh
SOCCER
Noon
ESPN2 Mens national teams, exhibition, Slov-
enia vs. United States, at Ljubljana, Slovenia
WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
6 p.m.
ESPN2 Miami at Tennessee
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
Today's Games
AHL
Binghamton at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, 7:05 p.m.
H.S. FIELD HOCKEY
PIAA Class 2A Semifinals
Wyoming Seminary vs. Palmyra, 6 p.m. at Emmaus
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Centenary at Misericordia, 7 p.m.
Kings at Penn College, 7 p.m.
PSU Hazleton at Wilkes, 7 p.m.
Lycoming at PSU Wilkes-Barre, 8 p.m.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Baptist Bible at PSU Wilkes-Barre, 6 p.m.
Wilkes at PSU Hazleton, 6 p.m.
Misericordia at Rowan, 7 p.m.
Mount Aloysius at Kings, 7 p.m.
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELANDINDIANSNamed Edwin Rodriguez
manager of Carolina (SL).
LOS ANGELES ANGELSNamed Hal Morris di-
rector of pro scouting.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKSSold RHP Kam
Mickolio to Hiroshima Toyo (Nippon Professional
Baseball League).
CHICAGO CUBSNamed Shiraz Rehman assist-
ant to the general manager.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIESAgreed to terms with
RHP Jonathan Papelbon on a four-year contract.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALSNamed Mike Matheny
manager.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CINCINNATI BENGALSPlaced CB Leon Hall on
injured reserve. Signed CBBrandon Ghee fromthe
practice squad. Placed LB DeQuin Evans on prac-
tice squad injured list.
JACKSONVILLEJAGUARSPlacedCBRashean
Mathis, G Eben Britton and LB Kyle Bosworth on
injured reserve. Signed TE Fendi Onobun off
Washingtons practicesquad. SignedTEColinClo-
herty to the practice squad. Waived TE Schuylar
Oordt from the practice squad.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM DUCKSClaimed LW Niklas Hagman
off waivers fromCalgary. Assigned CPeter Holland
to Syracuse (AHL).
LOS ANGELES KINGSPlaced F Dustin Penner
on injured reserve. Recalled F Andrei Loktionov
from Manchester (AHL).
MONTREAL CANADIENSRecalled F Andreas
Engqvist from hamilton (AHL).
NEW YORK ISLANDERSRecalled F Nino Nie-
derreiter from Bridgeport (AHL).
American Hockey League
PEORIA RIVERMENAnnounced D David
Shields was assigned to the team from Alaska
(ECHL).
SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGESigned LW Jeff
LoVecchio.
SPRINGFIELD FALCONSSigned F Tim Spen-
cer.
LACROSSE
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
COLUMBUS CREWSigned MF Eddie Gaven to
a multiyear contract extension.
COLLEGE
GEORGIATECHSuspendedLBJeremiahAttao-
chu for the first half of the Nov. 19 game at Duke for
throwing a punch at Virginia Tech QB Logan Tho-
mas.
MIAMIAnnounced S Ray-Ray Armstrong has
been reinstated to the football team.
H O C K E Y
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts
Pittsburgh ............................ 17 10 4 3 23
N.Y. Rangers....................... 15 9 3 3 21
Philadelphia......................... 16 9 4 3 21
New Jersey.......................... 15 8 6 1 17
N.Y. Islanders...................... 14 4 7 3 11
Northeast Division
GP W L OT Pts
Toronto................................. 17 10 6 1 21
Buffalo.................................. 16 10 6 0 20
Ottawa.................................. 18 8 9 1 17
Boston.................................. 15 8 7 0 16
Montreal............................... 16 7 7 2 16
Southeast Division
GP W L OT Pts
Washington ......................... 15 10 4 1 21
Florida.................................. 16 8 5 3 19
Tampa Bay........................... 16 8 6 2 18
Carolina ............................... 17 6 8 3 15
Winnipeg.............................. 17 5 9 3 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts
Chicago.............................. 18 11 4 3 25
Detroit................................. 15 9 5 1 19
Nashville............................ 16 8 5 3 19
St. Louis............................. 16 8 7 1 17
Columbus .......................... 16 3 12 1 7
Northwest Division
GP W L OT Pts
Minnesota............................. 17 9 5 3 21
Edmonton............................. 17 9 6 2 20
Vancouver ............................ 18 9 8 1 19
Colorado............................... 17 8 8 1 17
Calgary ................................. 16 7 8 1 15
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts
Dallas ................................... 16 11 5 0 22
Phoenix................................ 15 8 4 3 19
San Jose.............................. 15 9 5 1 19
Los Angeles ........................ 17 8 6 3 19
Anaheim............................... 17 6 8 3 15
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss.
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia 3, Florida 2
Chicago 6, Edmonton 3
Minnesota 3, Anaheim 2
Vancouver 4, N.Y. Islanders 1
Monday's Games
Philadelphia 5, Carolina 3
Buffalo 3, Montreal 2
Tampa Bay at Winnipeg, late
Today's Games
New Jersey at Boston, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Toronto, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Washington at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Florida at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Carolina at Montreal, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
American Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
St. Johns .................. 16 11 2 3 0 25 62 45
Providence................ 17 8 8 1 0 17 38 50
Manchester ............... 17 7 9 0 1 15 43 45
Worcester ................. 11 5 4 0 2 12 32 29
Portland..................... 13 5 7 0 1 11 35 43
East Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Penguins .................. 14 9 3 1 1 20 48 34
Norfolk........................ 16 9 6 0 1 19 59 47
Hershey ..................... 14 7 4 3 0 17 47 40
Syracuse.................... 13 6 4 2 1 15 44 44
Binghamton............... 16 5 9 1 1 12 37 51
Northeast Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Albany ........................ 16 8 6 1 1 18 37 46
Adirondack ................ 13 8 4 0 1 17 41 34
Connecticut ............... 14 7 4 1 2 17 44 44
Bridgeport .................. 15 8 6 1 0 17 47 51
Springfield ................. 14 7 7 0 0 14 41 42
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Charlotte.................... 16 9 6 1 0 19 43 40
Milwaukee.................. 12 8 3 0 1 17 34 29
Peoria......................... 15 7 6 1 1 16 52 47
Chicago...................... 13 6 5 0 2 14 32 31
Rockford .................... 13 5 7 1 0 11 38 49
North Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Rochester .................. 15 7 5 2 1 17 42 46
Toronto....................... 15 7 5 2 1 17 45 43
Hamilton..................... 14 6 7 1 0 13 32 45
Lake Erie.................... 16 6 9 1 0 13 34 45
Grand Rapids............ 14 6 8 0 0 12 37 38
West Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Abbotsford ................ 15 10 4 1 0 21 42 34
Oklahoma City.......... 15 10 4 0 1 21 46 33
Houston..................... 15 9 3 0 3 21 51 42
Texas......................... 14 6 7 0 1 13 47 48
San Antonio .............. 13 5 8 0 0 10 29 44
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win, one point
for an overtime or shootout loss.
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Today's Games
Abbotsford at San Antonio, 11:30 a.m.
Adirondack at Portland, 6:30 p.m.
Binghamton at Penguins, 7:05 p.m.
Peoria at Hamilton, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Worcester at Springfield, 7 p.m.
Syracuse at Rochester, 7:05 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Rockford, 8:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Peoria at Lake Erie, 7 p.m.
F O O T B A L L
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England .......................... 6 3 0 .667 259 200
N.Y. Jets ................................. 5 4 0 .556 215 200
Buffalo..................................... 5 4 0 .556 229 218
Miami ....................................... 2 7 0 .222 158 178
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston................................. 7 3 0 .700 273 166
Tennessee............................ 5 4 0 .556 186 172
Jacksonville.......................... 3 6 0 .333 115 166
Indianapolis .......................... 0 10 0 .000 131 300
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh................................ 7 3 0 .700 220 179
Baltimore................................. 6 3 0 .667 225 152
Cincinnati ................................ 6 3 0 .667 212 164
Cleveland................................ 3 6 0 .333 131 183
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Oakland................................... 5 4 0 .556 208 233
San Diego ............................... 4 5 0 .444 216 228
Denver..................................... 4 5 0 .444 188 234
Kansas City............................. 4 5 0 .444 141 218
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
N.Y. Giants.............................. 6 3 0 .667 218 211
Dallas ...................................... 5 4 0 .556 223 182
Philadelphia............................ 3 6 0 .333 220 203
Washington ............................ 3 6 0 .333 136 178
South
W L T Pct PF PA
New Orleans........................... 7 3 0 .700 313 228
Atlanta ..................................... 5 4 0 .556 212 196
Tampa Bay.............................. 4 5 0 .444 156 233
Carolina................................... 2 7 0 .222 190 237
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Green Bay............................. 9 0 0 1.000 320 186
Detroit.................................... 6 3 0 .667 252 184
Chicago................................. 6 3 0 .667 237 187
Minnesota............................. 2 7 0 .222 179 244
West
W L T Pct PF PA
San Francisco......................... 8 1 0 .889 233 138
Seattle...................................... 3 6 0 .333 144 202
Arizona.................................... 3 6 0 .333 183 213
St. Louis .................................. 2 7 0 .222 113 223
Thursday's Game
Oakland 24, San Diego 17
Sunday's Games
Dallas 44, Buffalo 7
Denver 17, Kansas City 10
Miami 20, Washington 9
St. Louis 13, Cleveland 12
Arizona 21, Philadelphia 17
Tennessee 30, Carolina 3
Pittsburgh 24, Cincinnati 17
Houston 37, Tampa Bay 9
New Orleans 26, Atlanta 23, OT
Jacksonville 17, Indianapolis 3
Seattle 22, Baltimore 17
San Francisco 27, N.Y. Giants 20
Chicago 37, Detroit 13
New England 37, N.Y. Jets 16
Monday's Game
Green Bay 45, Minnesota 7
Thursday, Nov. 17
N.Y. Jets at Denver, 8:20 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 20
Tampa Bay at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Carolina at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Washington, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Miami, 1 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Seattle at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.
San Diego at Chicago, 4:15 p.m.
Tennessee at Atlanta, 4:15 p.m.
Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, 8:20 p.m.
Open: Houston, Indianapolis, New Orleans, Pitts-
burgh
Monday, Nov. 21
Kansas City at New England, 8:30 p.m.
The Top Twenty Five
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press college
basketball poll, with first-place votes in parenthe-
ses, records through Nov. 13, total points based on
25 points for a first-place vote through one point for
a 25th-place vote and previous ranking:
..........................................................Record PtsPrv
1. North Carolina (62) .................... 2-01,620 1
2. Kentucky...................................... 1-01,519 2
3. Ohio St. (1) .................................. 1-01,486 3
4. UConn (2).................................... 1-01,429 4
5. Syracuse ..................................... 1-01,358 5
6. Duke............................................. 2-01,274 6
7. Florida.......................................... 1-01,132 8
8. Louisville...................................... 2-01,122 9
9. Pittsburgh.................................... 2-01,084 10
10. Memphis.................................... 0-01,017 11
11. Baylor ......................................... 2-0 962 12
12. Kansas....................................... 1-0 835 13
13. Xavier......................................... 1-0 806 14
14. Wisconsin.................................. 1-0 801 15
15. Arizona ...................................... 3-0 607 16
16. Alabama .................................... 1-0 497 19
17. Michigan.................................... 1-0 475 18
18. Vanderbilt .................................. 1-1 454 7
19. Texas A&M............................... 2-0 444 20
20. Cincinnati ................................... 1-0 410 21
21. Marquette.................................. 1-0 406 22
22. Gonzaga.................................... 1-0 311 23
23. California................................... 2-0 295 24
24. Missouri ..................................... 1-0 200 25
25. Florida St................................... 1-0 132
Others receivingvotes: Temple79, MichiganSt. 78,
Washington 47, Cleveland St. 43, New Mexico 34,
UCLA 34, Belmont 21, Creighton 19, Villanova 19,
Texas 18, Drexel 13, UNLV 9, Saint Marys (Cal) 6,
Purdue 5, Butler 3, George Mason 3, Harvard 3,
Long Beach St. 3, San Diego St. 3, Utah St. 3, Illi-
nois 2, Akron 1, Marshall 1, Minnesota 1, West Vir-
ginia 1.
Ballots Online: http://tinyurl.com/43u6jr6
College Basketball Top 25
Schedule
Monday's Games
No. 4 UConn vs. Wagner, 7:30 p.m.
No. 5 Syracuse vs. Manhattan, 7 p.m.
No. 16 Alabama vs. Oakland, 8 p.m.
No. 17 Michigan vs. Towson, 8:30 p.m.
No. 21 Marquette vs. Norfolk State, 7 p.m.
No. 22 Gonzaga vs. Washington State, Mid
No. 24 Missouri vs. Mercer, 8 p.m.
No. 25 Florida State vs. UCF, 7 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
No. 2 Kentucky vs. No. 12 Kansas at Madison
Square Garden, 9 p.m.
No. 3 Ohio State vs. No. 7 Florida, 8 p.m.
No. 5 Syracuse vs. Brown or Albany (NY), 4 or 7
p.m.
No. 6 Duke vs. Michigan State at Madison Square
Garden, 7 p.m.
No. 10 Memphis vs. Belmont, Noon
No. 11 Baylor vs. San Diego State, 2 p.m.
No. 13 Xavier vs. IPFW, 7 p.m.
No. 18 Vanderbilt vs. Bucknell, 8 p.m.
No. 20 Cincinnati vs. Jacksonville State, 7 p.m.
No. 23 California vs. Austin Peay, 10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
No. 9 Pittsburgh vs. Long Beach State, 9 p.m.
No. 15 Wisconsin vs. Colgate, 8 p.m.
No. 25 Florida State vs. Stetson, 7 p.m.
Thursday's Games
No. 4 Connecticut vs. Maine at the XL Center, Hart-
ford, Conn., 7 p.m.
No. 7 Florida vs. North Florida, 8 p.m.
No. 15Arizonaat St. Johns at MadisonSquareGar-
den, 9:30 p.m.
No. 16 Alabama vs. Maryland at Coliseo de Puerto
Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 5 p.m.
No. 17 Michigan vs. Western Illinois, 8:30 p.m.
No. 19 Texas A&Mvs. Mississippi State at Madison
Square Garden, 7 p.m.
No. 24 Missouri vs. Niagara, 8 p.m.
Friday's Games
No. 3 Ohio State vs. Jackson State, 9 p.m.
No. 6 Duke vs. Davidson, 6 p.m.
No. 13 Xavier vs. Miami (Ohio), 7 p.m.
No. 15 Arizona vs. No. 19 Texas A&Mor Mississippi
State at Madison Square Garden, 4:30 or 6:30 p.m.
No. 16 Alabama vs. Colorado or Wichita State at
Coliseo de Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico,
6:30 or 9 p.m.
No. 21 Marquette vs. Winthrop at UVI Sports & Fit-
ness Center, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday's Games
No. 2Kentucky vs. PennStateat MoheganSunAre-
na, Uncasville, Conn., Noon
No. 5 Syracuse vs. Colgate, 4 p.m.
No. 8 Louisville at Butler, 2 p.m.
No. 14 Wisconsin vs. Wofford, 8 p.m.
No. 18 Vanderbilt vs. N.C. State at the IZODCenter,
East Rutherford, N.J., 6:30 p.m.
No. 20 Cincinnati vs. Presbyterian, 4 p.m.
x-No. 21 Marquette vs. Drake or Mississippi at UVI
Sports & Fitness Center, St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands, 6 p.m.
No. 22 Gonzaga vs. Hawaii at Rogers Arena, Van-
couver, British Columbia, 9 p.m.
Sunday's Games
No. 1 North Carolina vs. MVSU, 2 p.m.
No. 4 UConn vs. Coppin State at the XL Center,
Hartford, Conn., 1 p.m.
No. 16 Alabama vs. TBA at Coliseo de Puerto Rico,
San Juan, Puerto Rico, TBA
No. 25 Florida State vs. South Alabama, 3 p.m.
x-Marquette plays Saturday if it loses Friday, Sun-
day if it wins Friday
B A S K E T B A L L
College Basketball Schedule
Today's Games
EAST
Kent St. at West Virginia, 10 a.m.
MichiganSt. vs. Dukeat MadisonSquareGarden, 7
p.m.
Lehigh at Fairleigh Dickinson, 7 p.m.
Harvard at Holy Cross, 7 p.m.
Yale at Quinnipiac, 7 p.m.
Stony Brook at Sacred Heart, 7 p.m.
Robert Morris at St. Peters, 7 p.m.
La Salle at Villanova, 7 p.m.
Kansas vs. Kentucky at Madison Square Garden, 9
p.m.
Drexel at Rider, 6 a.m.
SOUTH
Belmont at Memphis, Noon
LSU at Coastal Carolina, 7 p.m.
Appalachian St. at ETSU, 7 p.m.
South Carolina at Elon, 7 p.m.
Canisius at Longwood, 7 p.m.
Rutgers at Miami, 7 p.m.
Alice Lloyd at VMI, 7 p.m.
Winthrop at Virginia, 7 p.m.
Montreat at W. Carolina, 7 p.m.
Bluefield at Charleston Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Louisiana College at McNeese St., 8 p.m.
Spring Hill at SE Louisiana, 8 p.m.
Reinhardt at Tennessee Tech, 8 p.m.
Nicholls St. at Tulane, 8 p.m.
Bucknell at Vanderbilt, 8 p.m.
Morehead St. at Coll. of Charleston, 4 a.m.
MIDWEST
Chattanooga at Butler, 7 p.m.
Charlotte at Cent. Michigan, 7 p.m.
Jacksonville St. at Cincinnati, 7 p.m.
Rio Grande at Cleveland St., 7 p.m.
Dayton at Miami (Ohio), 7 p.m.
Lamar at Ohio, 7 p.m.
IPFW at Xavier, 7 p.m.
Notre Dame (Ohio) at Youngstown St., 7:05 p.m.
Florida at Ohio St., 8 p.m.
Saint Louis at S. Illinois, 8:05 p.m.
Iowa St. at Drake, 9 p.m.
SOUTHWEST
San Diego St. at Baylor, 2 p.m.
Rhode Island at Texas, 4 p.m.
Arlington Baptist at Prairie View, 8 p.m.
E. Michigan at Texas Southern, 8 p.m.
Howard Payne at Texas St., 8 p.m.
IUPUI at UALR, 8 p.m.
Missouri St. at Arkansas St., 8:05 p.m.
FAR WEST
Pepperdine at Arizona St., 8:30 p.m.
BYU-Hawaii at BYU, 9 p.m.
Utah St. at Weber St., 9 p.m.
N. Colorado at Wyoming, 9 p.m.
South Dakota at E. Washington, 9:05 p.m.
Austin Peay at California, 10 p.m.
UC Santa Cruz at UC Davis, 10 p.m.
Santa Clara at UC Santa Barbara, 10 p.m.
Seattle at Portland St., 10:05 p.m.
Middle Tennessee vs. UCLA, 11 p.m.
N. Iowa at Saint Marys (Cal), 2 a.m.
S O C C E R
Major League Soccer Playoffs
All Times EST
WILD CARDS
Wednesday, Oct. 26: New York 2, FC Dallas 0
Thursday, Oct. 27: Colorado 1, Columbus 0
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Semifinals
Sporting Kansas City vs. Colorado
Sporting City advances on aggregate 4-0
Sunday, Oct. 30: Sporting Kansas City 2, Colorado
0
Wednesday, Nov. 2: Sporting Kansas City 2, Col-
orado 0
Houston vs. Philadelphia
Houston advances on aggregate 3-1
Sunday, Oct. 30: Houston 2, Philadelphia 1
Thursday, Nov. 3: Philadelphia 0, Houston 1
Championship
Sunday, Nov. 6: Houston 2, Sporting Kansas City 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Semifinals
Los Angeles vs. New York
Los Angeles advances on aggregate 3-1
Sunday, Oct. 30: Los Angeles 1, New York 0
Thursday, Nov. 3: New York 1, Los Angeles 2
Seattle vs. Real Salt Lake
Real Salt Lake advances on aggregate 3-2
Saturday, Oct. 29: Seattle 0, Real Salt Lake 3
Wednesday, Nov. 2: Seattle 2, Real Salt Lake 0
Championship
Sunday, Nov. 6: Los Angeles 3, Real Salt Lake 1
MLS CUP
Sunday, Nov. 20: Houston vs. Los Angeles at Car-
son, Calif., 9 p.m.
N A S C A R
Sprint Cup Leaders
Through Nov. 13
Points
1, Carl Edwards, 2,359.
2, Tony Stewart, 2,356.
3, Kevin Harvick, 2,308.
4, Brad Keselowski, 2,294.
5, Jimmie Johnson, 2,291.
6, Matt Kenseth, 2,289.
7, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,257.
8, Kurt Busch, 2,252.
9, Ryan Newman, 2,252.
10, Denny Hamlin, 2,249.
11, Jeff Gordon, 2,247.
12, Kyle Busch, 2,224.
13, Clint Bowyer, 1,009.
14, Kasey Kahne, 1,004.
15, Greg Biffle, 987.
16, A J Allmendinger, 984.
17, Marcos Ambrose, 931.
18, Paul Menard, 919.
19, Juan Pablo Montoya, 918.
20, Mark Martin, 910.
Money
1, Carl Edwards, $8,189,573.
2, Tony Stewart, $6,188,613.
3, Jimmie Johnson, $6,178,148.
4, Kevin Harvick, $6,066,333.
5, Kyle Busch, $6,046,057.
6, Matt Kenseth, $6,009,848.
7, Kurt Busch, $5,828,016.
8, Jeff Gordon, $5,753,448.
9, Clint Bowyer, $5,488,318.
10, Denny Hamlin, $5,277,318.
11, Ryan Newman, $5,192,398.
12, Brad Keselowski, $4,992,586.
13, Juan Pablo Montoya, $4,915,243.
14, A J Allmendinger, $4,715,478.
15, Jamie McMurray, $4,687,103.
16, Marcos Ambrose, $4,657,548.
17, Kasey Kahne, $4,656,698.
18, Regan Smith, $4,481,063.
19, Bobby Labonte, $4,410,483.
20, David Reutimann, $4,275,983.
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
Nov. 18
At Miami, Giorbis Barthelemy vs. Charles Whittak-
er, 12, IBF junior middleweight eliminator; Yunier
Dorticos vs. Chris Stallworth, 10, cruiserweights.
Nov. 19
At Sydney, Australia, Billy Dib vs. Alberto Servidei,
12, for Dibs IBF featherweight title.
At Ballys, Atlantic City, N.J., Garrett Wilson vs.
Chuck Mussachio, 12, for Wilsons USBA cruiser-
weight title.
At Reliant Arena, Houston (HBO), Julio Cesar Cha-
vez Jr. vs. Peter Manfredo Jr., 12, for Chavezs
WBC middleweight title.
At Nayarit, Mexico, Jose Rodriguez vs. Nethra Sa-
siprapa, 12, for the interim WBA World light fly-
weight title.
Nov. 26
At U.S. Bank Arena, Cincinnati (HBO), Adrien Bron-
er vs. Vicente Rodriguez, 12, for the vacant WBO
junior lightweight title.
At the Bancomer Center, Mexico City (HBO), Cane-
lo Alvarez vs. Kermit Cintron, 12, for Alvarezs WBC
super welterweight title;Gilberto Ramirez sanchez
vs. Samuel Miller, 10, middleweights.
Packers 45, Vikings 7
Minnesota......................... 0 0 7 0 7
Green Bay......................... 14 3 14 14 45
First Quarter
GBCobb 80 punt return (Crosby kick), 13:42.
GBG.Jennings 24 pass from Rodgers (Crosby
kick), 5:02.
Second Quarter
GBFG Crosby 25, 12:04.
Third Quarter
GBNelson 17 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick),
10:45.
MinPeterson 3 run (Longwell kick), 8:41.
GBKuhn 9 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick),
6:21.
Fourth Quarter
GBNelson 4 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick),
10:59.
GBFlynn 3 run (Crosby kick), 4:27.
A70,519.
Min GB
First downs ........................... 14 23
Total Net Yards .................... 266 356
Rushes-yards ....................... 22-104 31-90
Passing.................................. 162 266
Punt Returns......................... 2-13 4-80
Kickoff Returns..................... 4-56 2-76
Interceptions Ret.................. 0-0 1-21
Comp-Att-Int ......................... 16-34-1 25-32-0
Sacked-Yards Lost .............. 3-28 3-22
Punts...................................... 6-43.8 2-49.5
Fumbles-Lost........................ 1-0 3-1
Penalties-Yards.................... 10-80 1-5
Time of Possession............. 26:42 33:18
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGMinnesota, Peterson 14-51, Harvin
3-18, Ponder 2-17, Booker 2-12, Webb 1-6. Green
Bay, Starks 13-63, Rodgers 6-21, Grant 8-6, Flynn
4-0.
PASSINGMinnesota, Ponder 16-34-1-190.
Green Bay, Rodgers 23-30-0-250, Flynn 2-2-0-38.
RECEIVINGMinnesota, Harvin 6-52, Jenkins
3-49, Rudolph 3-37, Shiancoe 1-33, Booker 1-9,
Webb 1-9, DImperio 1-1. Green Bay, Nelson 5-63,
Finley 3-67, Cobb 3-36, Driver 3-36, G.Jennings
3-32, Starks 3-11, Kuhn 2-9, Grant 1-17, J.Jones
1-9, Quarless 1-8.
MISSED FIELD GOALSMinnesota, Longwell 52
(SH).
College Football
The AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college
football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses,
records through Nov. 12, total points based on 25
points for a first-place vote through one point for a
25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
...........................................................Record Pts Pv
1. LSU (60) ...................................... 10-01,500 1
2. Oklahoma St. .............................. 10-01,432 2
3. Alabama....................................... 9-11,380 4
4. Oregon......................................... 9-11,326 6
5. Oklahoma.................................... 8-11,230 7
6. Arkansas...................................... 9-11,217 8
7. Clemson....................................... 9-11,075 9
8. Stanford ....................................... 9-11,071 3
9. Virginia Tech............................... 9-11,000 10
10. Boise St. .................................... 8-1 880 5
11. Houston ..................................... 10-0 867 11
12. Michigan St. .............................. 8-2 767 13
13. Georgia...................................... 8-2 756 14
14. South Carolina.......................... 8-2 706 15
15. Wisconsin.................................. 8-2 676 16
16. Kansas St. ................................. 8-2 629 17
17. Nebraska................................... 8-2 583 19
18. Southern Cal ............................. 8-2 564 18
19. TCU............................................ 8-2 402NR
20. Michigan .................................... 8-2 381 22
21. Penn St. ..................................... 8-2 320 12
22. Southern Miss........................... 9-1 250 25
23. Florida St. .................................. 7-3 107NR
24. Notre Dame............................... 7-3 93NR
25. Baylor ......................................... 6-3 68NR
Top 25 Schedule
Thursday
No. 9 Virginia Tech vs. North Carolina, 8 p.m.
No. 22 Southern Miss at UAB, 8 p.m.
Friday
No. 2 Oklahoma State at Iowa State, 8 p.m.
Saturday
No. 1 LSU at Mississippi, 7 p.m.
No. 3 Alabama vs. Georgia Southern, 2 p.m.
No. 4 Oregon vs. No. 18 Southern Cal, 8 p.m.
No. 5 Oklahoma at No. 25 Baylor, 8 p.m.
No. 6 Ark. vs. Miss.St. at Little Rock, Ark., 3:30 p.m.
No. 7 Clemson at NC State, 3:30 p.m.
No. 8 Stanford vs. California, 10:15 p.m.
No. 10 Boise State at San Diego State, 8 p.m.
No. 11 Houston vs. SMU, 3:30 p.m.
No. 12 Michigan State vs. Indiana, Noon
No. 13 Georgia vs. Kentucky, 12:21 p.m.
No. 14 South Carolina vs. The Citadel, Noon
No. 15 Wisconsin at Illinois, Noon
No. 16 Kansas State at Texas, 8 p.m.
No. 17 Nebraska at No. 20 Michigan, Noon
No. 19 TCU vs. Colorado State, 3:30 p.m.
No. 21 Penn State at Ohio State, 3:30 p.m.
No. 23 Florida State vs. Virginia, 7:30 p.m.
No. 24 Notre Dame vs. Boston College, 4 p.m.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 3B
S P O R T S
WILKES-BARRE TWP. Last
week Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Penguins goaltender Scott Mun-
roe sat down with head coach
John Hynes and delivered a
message.
Having made his last start on
Oct. 14, Munroe spent the last
month watching from the bench
as Brad Thiessen started the last
10 games as coach John Hynes
elected to stay with his hot goal-
tender.
I just wanted to let coach
know Im anxious to get back in
there and when that time comes
Ill be ready, Munroe said.
That time will be tonight. Af-
ter Mondays practice at the Mo-
hegan Sun Arena, Hynes said
Munroe will start tonights home
contest against the Binghamton
Senators.
He deserves it, Hynes said.
We brought him here to com-
pete for the spot and challenge to
play. Im really excited and I
know hes ready to go.
Munroe is winless in his only
two starts of the season the last
resulted in five goals against on
21 shots before he was replaced
by Thiessen to start the third pe-
riod.
But that doesnt mean Munroe
hasnt been sharp. In his first
start of the season Oct. 9
against Connecticut, Munroe
stopped all 23 shots he faced
through regulation and overtime
to earn a shutout. He missed the
win, however, when the Whale
outscored the Penguins on the
shootout.
I was happy with howthe sea-
son started for me, but its been a
while, Munroe said. Im pretty
excited to get back. Its been a
long time.
Hynes said Munroes lengthy
stay on the bench was solely the
result of Thiessen playing well
for a long stretch. Hynes has
made no secret that he will stick
with whichever goaltender is
hot, and its an opportunity that
Munroe can now take advantage
of.
Good play deserves more
play, Hynes said. Imexcited to
get him in there and get he and
Brad competing again.
Munroe has spent the last
month working with goaltending
coach Mike Bales to simulate
game situations in practice.
Practice, Munroe said, has
been critical is maintaining his
skill level and focus.
Just work hard, focus on ev-
ery shot and hopefully it will car-
ry over, he said. I play like I
practice.
And just how long Munroe
will play depends on how he
does tonight against Bingham-
ton.
A good showing against the
East Division rival Senators
could result in plenty more ac-
tion as the Penguins play three
games this weekend on the road.
Thats what I was told com-
ing into this year playing time
is based on merit. If you play well
you keep going, Munroe said.
Thats what Brad was doing and
if I can do that, great. We have
two good goalies here, a good
team I just want to contribute.
A H L
Munroe will start in net for Penguins tonight
NOTES
Steve MacIntyre wasnt too surprised that Norfolks Eric Neilson
didnt go down during their fight on Saturday. The 6-6, 265-pound
MacIntyre landed several bombs on the 6-1, 210-pound Neilson during
the lengthy bout. He hit me with a couple good ones too,
MacIntyre said of his fight with the New Brunswick native. Hes a
tough Maritimer. Hes got some Irish in him probably. I knew he was a
tough guy.
F Colin McDonald had what Hynes said was a maintenance day
and didnt practice on Monday.
Dustin Jeffrey went through an off-ice workout and is
questionable for tonights game. Hynes said the move isnt injury
related but simply a part of Jeffreys conditioning assignment.
Geoff Walker practiced wearing a red no-contact jersey. Hynes said
the winger needs a few more practices before he can return. D Boris
Valabik is also a ways off before he is ready for game action, Hynes
said.
Goalie hasnt started since
Oct. 14 and is winless in only
two starts this season.
By TOMVENESKY
tvenesky@timesleader.com
wished he had done more to
bring allegations against former
assistant Jerry Sandusky to light.
Branching out
As TomBradleytries topickup
the pieces from last week, Penn
States interim coach said he
must break the routine he hadde-
veloped as defensive coordinator
since 2000.
That includes having to inte-
grate himself into the offense
while not trying to do too much
at the same time.
I toldeverybody that for me to
go over to offense and stick my
nose in -- I really havent been on
offense since I coached wide re-
ceivers in I think it was 1983,
Bradley said. Im going to try to
spendsome time onoffense start-
ing this week. Not so much with
play calling and Xs and Os, but I
would really like to get around
the players. I dont get to spend
enough time with the offensive
players because I coachdefense, I
spend all my time knowing the
personalities of my defensive
players.
The only guys I know on of-
fense on a day-to-day basis are
some of the players I recruited.
My goal is to go over there and
spend some time. I feel its neces-
sary that I do that. If Imgoing to
get around them, I want to know
their personalities and the way
they dothings over there because
Ive been away fromit for so long.
Ive really got to let go and turn
the reins of the defense over to
Larry (Johnson) and Ron (Van-
derlinden) and Kermit (Buggs).
Closing it out
Twenty-three players were in-
troduced before Saturdays game
as part of the senior day ceremo-
ny, as an approximate 317 former
lettermen in attendance created
a winding tunnel for them to run
through.
Ahandful of those players who
came out for their final game at
Beaver Stadiumstill hada season
of eligibility remaining, includ-
ing Lake-Lehman grad Kenny
Pollock.
The most surprising name was
the first to be announced -- red-
shirt junior tailback Brandon
Beachum.
Beachum played as a true
freshman and tore an ACL to-
ward the end of his sophomore
season in 2009. He redshirted in
2010 before returning to be Silas
Redds top backup to start this
year, but injuries have limited
himand it nowappears he will be
moving on.
Up next
Penn State will travel to Ohio
State for a 3:30 p.m. kickoff Sat-
urday on ABC.
The school also announced
Mondaythat the Lions Nov. 26fi-
nale at Wisconsin will also be a
3:30 p.m. start that will be shown
locally on ABC.
STAGG
Continued from Page 1B
do, and where we need to be
for each other.
Thats why you saw McMul-
lan stepping up Saturday, hus-
tling back to clear a ball right
in front of goalkeeper Hannah
Dressler. McMullan thwarted
a Southern Lehigh scoring op-
portunity with her drive
which went out of the circle
farther and faster than a ball
propelled by a goalies boot.
You know where to go out
there, and we knoweach other
is there for us, McMullan
said.
Holmes showed off her stick
control skills late in Satur-
days game, calmly backpedal-
ing toward the corner of the
field with the ball. She drew
Southern Lehighs forecheck
out of its shape by working
away fromthe pressure and, as
she reached the sideline, was
able to spark a Wyoming Semi-
nary rush upfield.
Its been a very long sea-
son, but weve known what we
had to do, Holmes said. We
worked so hard all year, and
the last couple of practices
were so good. We are ready for
this.
When Wyoming Seminary
was looking for a spark in the
first half Saturday, Granger
took the situation into her
hands.
Coming out of a timeout,
she made a defensive stop on a
Southern Lehigh rush, then
dribbled past another Spartan
and advanced the ball to mid-
field. She then sent a lead pass
to Ann Romanowski, who set
up AshLeigh Sebias reverse-
stick shot that went just over
the crossbar.
We are all communicating
together and watching where
they are, Granger said of
marking stars such as South-
ern Lehighs Kendall Weed-
ling, a Louisville recruit. And
we use AshLeigh and our Divi-
sion I players to combat
theirs.
While that works on offense,
the defensive group is proven
up to the task as well. Despite
playing national No. 2 Eastern
(N.J.), Kentucky power Sa-
cred Heart and state semifi-
nalist Selinsgrove, the Blue
Knights are averaging just
1.48 goals allowed per game
a stat that drops to 1.15 goals
against if those three games
are removed from the ledger.
They are working now with
Hannah Dressler in goal. The
junior took over in goal during
the District 2 playoffs after El-
lie McDougal was lost for the
season to an illness.
Shes a great goalie,
Holmes said. We can all spot
her and we have worked to-
gether very well.
Shes quiet, Granger add-
ed. She almost asks you (to
do something) out there.
Yeah, shes different than
Ellie, who is so much louder
when she directs you,
Holmes said.
While the seniors have one
week left in their careers, its
the class of 2013 that will carry
the Blue Knights in the future.
With six juniors starting,
though, that class is propell-
ing Wyoming Seminary this
season as well.
We just work very well to-
gether, McMullan said of the
defensive trio. Were all best
friends and were always to-
gether. Weve been together
since summer camps.
I think this has probably
been our best season yet, she
continued. In the beginning
of the season, we had the
flood, a couple of people lost
their houses. Weve had inju-
ries and illnesses, and weve
won the district and made
states.
And Wyoming Seminary is a
game away from playing for
another state championship.
THE MATCHUP
When: 6 p.m. today at Emmaus High School.
Records: Wyoming Seminary (16-5-2); Palmyra (18-6-0).
How they qualified: Wyoming Seminary won District 2; Palmyra
won District 3.
How they got here: Wyoming Seminary defeated Donegal 3-2 and
Southern Lehigh 3-0; Palmyra defeated Gwynedd Mercy 3-1 and
Shady Side Academy 3-0.
The streak: The Blue Knights won their 14th consecutive state
tournament game by downing previously unbeaten Southern
Lehigh. They scored three goals in the second half against the
District 11 champs, who have a junior goaltender with 48 career
shutouts. The last team to defeat Sem in the state playoffs was
Palmyra in the 2005 state semifinals.
Up next: The winner will face either District 1 champ Villa Maria
Academy or District 4 champ Selinsgrove in Saturdays state final
in Whitehall.
KNIGHTS
Continued from Page 1B
for getting unsportsmanlike con-
duct penalties in consecutive
games against Wyoming Valley
West and Crestwood.
Galicki and Goeringer de-
clined to comment on whether
the suspension had any bearing
on Jackson Jr.s resignation or
whether he was forced to resign.
At this point in time, we cant
say any more, Galicki said. Its a
personnel decision, andit was his
decision to make.
He made the decision to re-
sign, Dr. Goeringer added. He
didnt have to resign.
Galicki said the school will
post the position on its website
today and in the local newspa-
pers on Wednesday. Applications
will be accepted until noon on
Nov. 23. Interviews will be held
Nov. 26 and a new coach will be
appointed soon thereafter.
Galicki wouldnt say whether
JacksonJr. will continue inhis ca-
pacity as an assistant football
coach. JacksonJr. is the teams of-
fensive coordinator. Dallas plays
Valley View on Saturday after-
noon for the District 2 Class 3A
championship.
Thats not the issue, Galicki
said. Theres no comment on
that.
In the meantime, junior high,
freshmen and junior varsity
coaches will conduct practices.
Were going to be at a disad-
vantage at the start, Dr. Goerin-
ger said.
JacksonJr. was scheduledtobe
paid $6,235 to coach boys basket-
ball. He coached the varsity team
for seven seasons, compiling an
overall record of 97-76 according
to The Times Leader records.
The Mountaineers advanced to
the PIAA Class 3A tournament
once under Jackson Jr., earning
the District 2 third seed in the
2007-08 season and losing 54-36
to Susquehanna Township in the
first round.
The PIAA allows boys basket-
ball teams to hold their first
scrimmages onNov. 25. Theycan
play their first game on Dec. 9.
Dallas opens its Wyoming Valley
Conference season on Jan. 3 by
hosting Tunkhannock.
DALLAS
Continued from Page 1B
RALEIGH, N.C. Claude
Giroux had two goals and an
assist to lead the surging Phila-
delphia Flyers to a 5-3 win over
the Carolina Hurricanes on
Monday night.
Matt Read had a goal and an
assist, and Maxime Talbot and
Wayne Simmonds scored the
other goals for Philadelphia,
which got three assists from
Chris Pronger.
Giroux has 11 goals this
season after his first multigoal
game. Jaromir Jagr added two
assists.
Patrick Dwyer scored his
first two goals of the season for
Carolina, one short-handed and
another on a penalty shot.
Tuomo Ruutu also scored for
Carolina.
Flyers goalie Sergei Bobrov-
sky stopped 17 shots.
Hurricanes goalie Cam Ward
had 13 saves on 17 shots before
being pulled for Brian Boucher.
Sabres 3, Canadiens 2
MONTREAL Brad Boyes
and Thomas Vanek scored in a
shootout to help the Buffalo
Sabres beat the Montreal Cana-
diens.
Jhonas Enroth made 25
saves in place of injured starter
Ryan Miller to improve to 6-0
this season. Miller sustained a
concussion Saturday night in a
collision with Boston forward
Milan Lucic in the Sabres 6-2
loss to Boston.
Jason Pominville and Derek
Roy scored in regulation for
Buffalo, which overcame a 2-0
deficit in the third period for
its fourth victory in five games.
Vanek had an assist on Roys
goal.
Max Pacioretty and Erik
Cole scored for the Canadiens,
and Carey Price made 30 saves.
Montreal opened the scoring
at 3:58 of the second. Defense-
man P.K. Subban sent pass
over to Cole, who ripped a slap
shot from the left faceoff circle
for his fourth of the season.
N H L
AP PHOTO
The Philadelphia Flyers Wayne Simmonds, left, and James van
Riemsdyk (21) celebrate Simmons goal against the Carolina
Hurricanes during the second period of an NHL game in Raleigh,
N.C., on Monday. Philadelphia won the game 5-3.
Giroux carries Flyers
to win over Hurricanes
The Associated Press
Four enter Hall
TORONTO The Hockey
Hall of Fame has opened its
doors to four new members.
Joe Nieuwendyk, Ed
Belfour, Doug Gilmour and
Mark Howe were presented
with rings at the hall Monday
morning.
Howe was a converted
defenseman whose smooth
skating and crisp passing
helped the Flyers twice reach
the Stanley finals.
Nieuwendyk was a quiet
leader who won three Stanley
Cups with three teams.
Belfour was a goaltender
who finished his career third
on the NHLs career win list.
Gilmour was a heart-and-soul
player who got the most out
of his modest size.
Howe had been eligible for
more than a decade, but now
joins his superstar father in
the shrine. Gordie Howe sat in
the front row during Mondays
ceremony.
Nelson, and also found Greg Jen-
nings andJohnKuhnfor scores.
Adrian Peterson was held to14
carries for 51 yards and a touch-
downfortheVikings(2-7). Rookie
quarterback Christian Ponder
was16 of 34 for 190 yards with an
interception.
After the Packers defense
forcedtheVikingstogothree-and-
outontheirfirstpossession, Cobb
fielded a punt from Chris Kluwe
and squeezed through a seam in
themiddleofthefield. Cobbaccel-
erated down the left sideline and
dancedthefinal fewstepsintothe
endzone, tossingtheballintheair
as if he was shooting a basketball
beforedoingaLambeauleap in-
tothestands.
It was the Packers first punt re-
turn for a touchdown since No-
vember 2008. Cobb, a second-
round rookie wide receiver out of
Kentucky, also had a 108-yard
kickoff return for a touchdown in
the Packers season opener
against theNewOrleans Saints.
Rodgers finally got the ball at
the 9:55 mark in the first quarter
and directed an 11-play, 70-yard
drive that included conversions
on third-and-8, to Donald Driver,
and third-and-7, to running back
James Starks.
PACKERS
Continued from Page 1B
Will Power was back in a race
car Monday for the first time
since breaking his back in the
IndyCar Series finale last month
at Las Vegas.
Power tested at Barber Motor-
sports Park in Alabama and said
he felt fine and had no soreness
in his back. The test is sched-
uled to run two days, and Power
was to be back in the car Tues-
day.
Power had been sidelined
since sustaining two compres-
sion fractures in his thoracic
vertebrae in the Oct. 16 race at
Las Vegas. Two-time Indianapo-
lis 500 winner Dan Wheldon
was killed in the 15-car accident.
Its the second time Power
has broken his back in an In-
dyCar accident, but the Team
Penske driver had no reserva-
tions about returning to the car
Monday.
A U T O R A C I N G
Power back in car for 1st time since crash
The Associated Press
C M Y K
PAGE 4B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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NEW YORK Craig Kim-
brel overpowered hitters with
his rocket right arm, then over-
whelmed rivals in the NL Roo-
kie of the Year voting.
If only, the Atlanta Braves
closer figured, his final outing
couldve gone better.
Kimbrel unanimously won
the NL honor on Monday, with
Tampa Bay pitcher Jeremy Hel-
lickson a clear choice as the top
rookie in the AL.
Kimbrel set a major league re-
cord for saves by a rookie with
46. He earned all 32 first-place
votes in balloting by the Base-
ball Writers Association of
America and outpointed Braves
teammate Freddie Freeman.
It definitely did surprise
me, Kimbrel said on a confer-
ence call from his vacation in
Hawaii. I expected it to be
close.
Kimbrel was dominant for
much of the year, chosen as an
NL All-Star during his streak of
38 straight appearances with-
out allowing a run. But that
streak ended in mid-September
and the 23-year-old Kimbrel
struggledas theBraves frittered
away a 10 1/2-game lead in the
NL wild-card race.
Kimbrels eighth blown save
of the year came in the final
game of the season, when he
walked three, gave up a hit and
allowed the tying run in the
ninth inning against Philadel-
phia. The Phillies went on to
win in the 13th, costing the
Braves a spot in a one-game
playoff against St. Louis for the
wild-card slot.
I blew many saves through-
out the year. It just so happened
that one came in the last game
of the year with everything on
the line, he said. My control
was not there, I was all over the
place.
Im going to get over it, but
Im not going to forget it, he
said. I need to fix it.
Kimbrel struck out 127 in on-
ly 77 innings and anchored At-
lantas outstanding bullpen,
pitching 79 games. He was 4-3
with a 2.10 ERA, and his long
scoreless spancovered372-3in-
nings.
I did learn that the season is
long, he said.
Kimbrel wound up tied for
Milwaukees John Axford for
theNLleadinsaves. Hebecame
the 10th unanimous NL rookie
winner, and first since Albert
Pujols in 2001. Kimbrel was the
seventh Braves player to win
the award that began in 1947,
and first since Rafael Furcal in
2000.
Kimbrel, who pitched 21
games in 2010 but still retained
his rookie eligibility, earned160
points in the BBWAAballoting.
Freeman, who hit .282 with 21
home runs and 76 RBIs, was
second with 21 second-place
votes and 70 points. Kimbrel
and Freeman became the first
pair of teammates to finish 1-2
in the NL rookie voting since
Cubs outfielders Jerome Wal-
ton and Dwight Smith in 1989.
Philadelphia pitcher Vance
Worley was third and Washing-
ton catcher Wilson Ramos was
fourth. Ramos was kidnapped
in Venezuela last week and
freed Saturday when comman-
dos raided the mountain hide-
out where he was being held.
Hellickson went 13-10 with a
2.95 ERA in helping the Rays
take the AL wild-card spot. He
drew 17 of 28 first-place votes
and finished well ahead of Los
Angeles Angels first baseman
Mark Trumbo.
Its something I really want-
ed to win, Hellickson said on a
conference call from his home
in Iowa. He said there were
three or four guys equally de-
serving of the award.
The 24-year-old Hellickson
was a big reason the Rays were
able toerase a nine-game deficit
against Boston in the last 3 1/2
weeks to win the AL wild-card
spot. He was unbeaten in five
starts against AL East teams in
the final month, and finished
7-3 in games against division ri-
vals.
On the next-to-last day, he
kept the Rays close against the
visiting New York Yankees. On
his final pitch of the regular sea-
son, Hellickson got Russell
Martin to ground into a triple
play with the bases loaded, and
the Rays went on to win.
Hellickson, incidentally, has
a Yorkshire terrier called Jeter
as in, Yankees star Derek Je-
ter. Hellicksons dad was a big
Reggie Jacksonfan, andthe dog
wound up with the name.
Hellickson is generously list-
ed at 6-foot-1, but held up ex-
tremely well over 29 starts. He
led all big league rookies in
ERA, innings (189) and oppo-
nents batting average (.210).
Ive believed in myself and
had all the confidence in the
world in myself, he said.
Like Kimbrel, Hellicksons fi-
nal outing was rocky. Against
Texas in Game 4 in the opening
round of the AL playoffs, he
gave up a leadoff home run to
Ian Kinsler and two homers to
Adrian Beltre and left after four
innings as the Rangers clinched
the series.
Hellickson, who went 4-0 in
10 starts for the Rays in 2010,
joined Evan Longoria (2008) as
Tampa Bay players to win the
ALrookie honor. Hellicksonfin-
ished with 102 points.
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tampa Bay Rays starter Jeremy Hellickson, left, and Atlanta Braves reliever Craig Kimbrel were
named the American League and National League rookies of the year Monday.
Top rookie awards announced
Braves Kimbrel is
unanimous choice and Rays
Hellickson is runaway winner.
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Cards pick Matheny as La Russas successor
ST. LOUIS The St. Louis Cardinals have introduced Mike
Matheny as their new manager.
Matheny will replace Tony La Russa, who abruptly retired after
the Cardinals won the World Series last month. Even though
Matheny has no managing experience, general manager John
Mozeliak said the four-time Gold Glove catcher stood out from a
group of candidates that began with about 35 names.
Matheny donned a No. 22 Cardinals jersey at his inaugural
news conference. The 41-year-old Matheny called it the greatest
honor of his life. The Cardinals expect to finalize the coaching
staff by the end of the week. Mozeliak said pitching coach Dave
Duncan should be back.
PHILADELPHIA Welcome
to the Phillies, Cinco Ocho.
Jonathan Papelbon and his al-
ter ego finalized a $50 million,
four-year contract with Philadel-
phia onMonday. The former Bos-
ton Red Sox closer had agreed to
terms with the Phillies on Friday.
The contract is the largest ever
for areliever, andit actuallytotals
$50,000,058.
The deal in-
cludes a vesting
option for 2016
that could be-
come guaran-
teed based on
games finished
and would
make it worth
$63 million over five seasons.
So what about that extra $58?
Youll have to ask Cinco Ocho
that question, Papelbonjoked. I
can give you his phone number if
you need it.
Papelbon will wear No. 58,
which belonged to lefty Antonio
Bastardo last year. His nickname,
of course, mimics Chad Ochocin-
co. The six-time Pro Bowl wide
receiver legally changed his
name from Chad Johnson to
match his uniform No. 85.
The Phillies are counting on
Papelbon to produce far more
than Ochocinco has in New En-
gland this year. He has just 11
catches in his first season with
the Patriots.
Papelbon replaces Ryan Mad-
son, also a free agent. The Phil-
lies were negotiating with Mad-
sons agent, Scott Boras, last
week before going after Papel-
bon.
He is among the elite closers
in the game and someone who
clearly has a passion to win, gen-
eral manager Ruben Amaro Jr.
said.
Papelbon, a four-time All-Star,
turns 31 on Nov. 23. He had 219
saves over sevenseasons withthe
Red Sox, including 31 this year,
when he made $12 million. The
right-hander helped Boston to
the 2007 World Series title.
The Phillies have long beenop-
posed to giving pitchers con-
tracts beyond three years. They
made an exception last year
when they signed left-hander
Cliff Lee to a $120 million, five-
year deal.
Four years is a little uncom-
fortable, but on a player like this
and a person who has had this
pedigree and this background
and success, sometimes you go
the extra mile to do that, Amaro
said. We felt he was the right guy
to take a risk on.
The magic
No. is 58
for Phillies
and closer
Papelbon officially introduced
as teams new fireman with
four-year, $50,000,058 deal.
By ROB MAADDI
AP Sports Writer
Papelbon
tive lawsuit seeking to prove the
lockout is legal andcontends that
without a union that collectively
bargainedthem, theplayers guar-
anteed contracts could legally be
voided.
During oral arguments on Nov.
2, the NBA asked U.S. District
Judge Paul Gardephe to decide
the legality of its lockout, but he
was reluctant to wade into the
leagues labor mess. Gardephe
has yet to issue a ruling.
Two years of bargaining
couldnt produce a deal, with
owners desires for more compet-
itive balance clashing with play-
ers wishes to keep the salary cap
system largely intact. The sides
last met Thursday, when the
league offered a revised proposal
but told the players there would
be no further negotiating on it.
Stern, who is a lawyer, had
urged players to take the deal on
the table, saying its the best the
NBAcould offer and advised that
decertification is not a winning
strategy.
Players ignored that warning,
choosing instead to dissolve the
union, giving them a chance to
winseveral billiondollarsintriple
damages in an antitrust lawsuit.
This is the best decision for
the players, union president De-
rek Fisher said. I want to reiter-
atethat point, that alot of individ-
ual playershavealot of thingsper-
sonally at stake in terms of their
careers and where they stand.
Andright nowtheyfeel itsimpor-
tant weall feel its important to
all our players, not just theones in
this room, but our entiregroup
that we not only try to get a deal
done for today but for the body of
NBA players that will come into
this league over the next decade
and beyond.
Fisher, flankedatapressconfer-
encebydozensof playerrepresen-
tatives and superstars including
Kobe Bryant andCarmelo Antho-
ny, said the decision was unani-
mous. But there were surely play-
ers throughout the league who
would have preferred union lead-
ershipputtheproposal toavoteof
the full membership, with many
ready to go back to work.
The sides still can negotiate
during the legal process, so play-
ersdidnt want towriteoff thesea-
son just yet.
I dont want to make any as-
sumptions, union VP Keyon
Dooling said. I believe well con-
tinuetotrytogetadeal doneorlet
thisprocessplayout. I dont know
what toexpect fromthisprocess.
NBA
Continued from Page 1B
Now that NBA players are pre-
paringtotake the labor fight with
the leagues owners to the cour-
troom, some legal experts expect
themtofaceadauntingchallenge
if they file an antitrust lawsuit.
The players rejected the latest
offer from owners Monday and
started a process of disbanding
the union, a move that would al-
lowthemtosue the league, much
like the NFLplayers didthis sum-
mer.
But rulings in the NFL players
case against owners could make
it tougher for their basketball
brethren, antitrust lawyer David
Scupp said. NFL players dis-
solvedtheir unionandfiledanan-
titrust lawsuit this summer. A
federal judge in Minnesota lifted
the lockout in June, but that rul-
ing was overturned on appeal.
Because the NBA case likely
would take place in a different
court, the ruling of the 8th Cir-
cuit in St. Louis to vacate U.S.
District Judge Susan Richard
Nelsons injunction of the NFL
lockout will not be binding. But it
will be influential, Scupp said.
Given the rulings that came
down in the NFL case, right now
the owners are not in a bad spot,
Scupp said. It could very well be
that the players have an uphill
battle toward getting that lock-
out enjoined.
Jay Krupin, chairmanof the na-
tional labor and employment
practiceat EpsteinBecker Green,
said NBAplayers should expect a
similar outcome to what hap-
pened to NFL players in the sum-
mer.
It may be a different shape of a
ball, but its very similar circum-
stance, Krupin said. Its been
threatened in baseball, its been
threatened in football and now
its being threatened in basket-
ball. The reason is that the play-
ers have nothing else to threaten
with.
There are many legal twists
and turns that this case will take
before a judge makes any kind of
outcome-affecting ruling, per-
haps none more intriguing than
the NBA players hiring David
Boies and Jeffrey Kessler to rep-
resent them in any potential liti-
gation. Boies represented the
NFL owners and squared off
against Kessler, who represented
NFL players, in court this sum-
mer.
The fact that the two biggest
legal adversaries in the NFL play-
ers dispute over the NFL lockout
both agree that the NBA lockout
is nowillegal andsubject to triple
damages speaks for itself, Kess-
ler saidinanemail to The Associ-
ated Press.
Krupin wasnt so sure.
Hes one of the premier attor-
neys in America, he said of
Boies, but that doesnt mean the
case is any better.
The league already has filed a
pre-emptive lawsuit seeking to
prove the lockout is legal and
contends that without a union
that collectively bargained them,
the players guaranteed contracts
could legally be voided. That
case was filedinNewYork, where
the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals
has issued several rulings in the
NBAs favor over the years.
If the players decide to sue,
they could file anywhere, possi-
bly heading out west to Califor-
nia in hopes of finding more la-
bor-friendly venues. But both
Scupp and Krupin said the case
likely would be steered back to
New York because the owners
have already started the fight
there.
N B A
Players could be in
for a trying lawsuit
By JON KRAWCZYNSKI
AP Sports Writer
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 5B
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0
SYRACUSE, N.Y. Dion
Waiters had17 points, Kris Jo-
seph and James Southerland
each had15, and No. 5 Syracuse
beat Manhattan 92-56 on Mon-
day night in the NITSeason
Tip-Off.
The Orange (2-0) will play
Albany (1-1) at home tonight.
The Great Danes beat Brown
77-68 earlier Monday in the
Carrier Dome. Gerardo Suero
had 29 points and Logan Aron-
halt added19 points and13 re-
bounds to lead Albany.
Syracuse had won11straight
in the series against Manhattan,
the most recent 87-82 in over-
time six years ago. This one was
over at halftime.
The Orange were 22 of 38
(57.9 percent) in the opening
period, 7 of 13 frombeyond the
arc, with Joseph hitting 3 of 4 to
go over 1,000 points in his career.
And the Syracuse defense forced
16 turnovers, blocked seven
shots, and held the Jaspers to 9
of 29 shooting (31percent) as
the Orange built a 52-26 lead at
the break.
Brandon Triche had12 points
and 7-foot center Fab Melo again
was a force down low, finishing
with11points, a career-high nine
rebounds, and four of the Or-
anges10 blocks.
Kidani Brutus had15 points
and George Beamon14 to lead
the Jaspers (1-1).
First-year Manhattan coach
Steve Masiello spent the last six
years on Rick Pitinos staff at
Louisville, and no surprise the
Jaspers came out with a press. It
took Syracuse about five minutes
to find a rhythm, and once the
Orange did it was off to the races.
They had 27 fast-break points
and 20 points fromthe bench in
the first half as coach JimBoe-
heimagain substituted freely.
After Michael Alvarado hit a
wide-open 3 to give Manhattan
an 8-5 lead, Waiters and C.J. Fair
combined to steal an inbounds
pass and set up Triche for a slam
dunk. That started a15-0 spurt
that included 3-pointers from
Triche and Waiters and was
capped by Waiters steal and
dunk.
Penn State 62, Radford 46
STATECOLLEGETim
Frazier scored 20 points, Trey
Lewis added nine and Penn State
defeated Radford 62-46 on Mon-
day night.
The Nittany Lions (2-0) used a
14-0 run midway through the
first half to gain control.
Up nine at the break, Penn
State hit three straight 3-pointers
to begin the second half. The
Nittany Lions used that mo-
mentumto shoot 52 percent (13
of 25) in the second half after
shooting just 11of 28 (39 per-
cent) in the first.
Frazier, Penn States lone
returning starter, also tallied10
assists, six rebounds and three
steals.
Jareal Smith led Radford (2-1)
with16 points. Smith scored the
Highlanders first 11points over
the first 5:30, but shot 2 of 10
after that.
In the wake of the child sex
abuse scandal that rocked the
school last week, Penn States
coaching staff wore blue sneak-
ers to honor victims of child
abuse.
Marquette 99,
Norfolk State 68
MILWAUKEEJae Crowder
had 25 points and10 rebounds
and Darius Johnson-Odomadd-
ed 24 points and No. 21Mar-
quette had little trouble beating
Norfolk State.
Marquette (2-0) scored the
first six points of the game and
never trailed.
Chris McEachin tied a career
high with19 points and Marcos
Tamares had a career-high with
17 points for Norfolk State (0-1)
of the Mid-Eastern Athletic
Conference.
Florida St. 73,
Central Florida 50
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Ber-
nard James had18 points and11
rebounds and Michael Snaer
added15 points to lead No. 25
Florida State to a victory over
cold-shooting Central Florida.
Both were career-highs for the
6-foot-10 James, who had14
points and eight rebounds in the
second half on the way to his
fifth career double-double.
Two other members of Florida
States big front line, 6-11Xavier
Gibson, and husky 6-8 Terrance
Shannon, added12 and10 points.
Michigan 64, Towson 47
ANNARBOR, Mich. Tim
Hardaway Jr. scored15 points,
and No. 17 Michigan started the
game on a 21-0 run before cruis-
ing to a victory over Towson.
Freshman Trey Burke scored
13 points in his first career start,
and Evan Smotrycz had13 as
well. The Wolverines (2-0) also
started the second half with six
straight points to take a 43-16
lead.
Robert Nwankwo led Towson
(0-2) with16 points.
Alabama 74, Oakland 57
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Ja-
Mychal Green scored18 points
to lead No. 16 Alabama to a victo-
ry over Oakland.
Trevor Releford added14
points for the Crimson Tide
(2-0), while Tony Mitchell had12
and Trevor Lacey10. Mitchell
had nine rebounds and four
assists.
Reggie Hamilton led Oakland
(0-1) with16 points, all in the
first half. DrewValentine had11
points and Laval Lucas-Perry
added10 for the Golden Griz-
zlies. Corey Petros had seven
rebounds.
Missouri 81, Mercer 63
COLUMBIA, Mo. Phil
Pressey had a career-best 22
points with four assists and five
steals, helping No. 24 Missouri
beat Mercer.
KimEnglish added18 points
and Michael Dixon contributed
14 points, and Missouri (2-0)
used its speed to force14 steals.
Dixon and Pressey combined for
18 points in the Tigers first game
against Southeast Missouri State
on Friday.
Connecticut 78, Wagner 66
STORRS, Conn. Shabazz
Napier scored 21points and No.
4 Connecticut extended Division
Is longest winning streak to13
games with a victory over Wagn-
er.
Jeremy Lamb added 20 points
and seven rebounds for the
Huskies (2-0), who have never
lost a game at Gampel Pavilion
during the months of November
or December.
Syracuse routs Manhattan; PSU tops Radford
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Syracuses James Southerland reacts after dunking against Man-
hattan during the second half of the Dicks Sporting Goods NIT
Season Tip-Off game in Syracuse, N.Y., on Monday. Syracuse won
92-56.
The Associated Press
C M Y K

PAGE 6B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com


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(Back Mountain)
674-3939
BLOOMSBURG
784-5663
DANVILLE
275-0390
HAZLETON
454-2545
MOUNTAIN TOP
474-0100
7
2
2
1
2
1
1280 Sans Souci Parkway Wilkes-Barre
570-819-0730 or 1-866-704-0672
SERVICE SPECIALS
NISSAN FACTORY TRAINED TECHS.
TIRE ROTATION ---------------------------------------$9.99
PA. STATE INSPECTION -------------------------------$9.99
LUBE - OIL - FILTER CHANGE ----------------------$21.95
PA. EMISSIONS TEST -------------------------------$24.95
WE SERVICE ALL MAKES AND MODELS
P R E S E N T C OU P ON AT T I ME OF S E R V I C E .
KEN POLLOCK
KEN POLLOCK KEN POLLOCK
C
O
U
P
O
N
C
O
U
P
O
N
C
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U
P
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N
C
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U
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229 M undy Street W ilkes-Barre, Pa
570-819-0730 O r 1-866-704-0672
P R E S E N T C OU P ON AT T I ME OF S E R V I C E .
H A N D W A SH & W A X .....................................$34.95
*Oil Change Good Up To 5 Quarts.
PA STA TE IN SPEC TIO N ...................................$12.95
PA EM ISSIO N S TEST......................................$25.95
110 Lost
LOST.
Chihuahua/Terrier
mix. Small, all white
except for half his
face & ear. Named
DJ. Lost near sports
complex in WB.
570-351-4614
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Going for 20 plus
today. Ben way
past it...Drust
has like 5.
Europe counts
as 100. Novem-
ber is the new
September...
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Please stop in at
Don's Deli
seeing this is the
last week it will
be located on
West End Road...
This is the count
down. Don's Deli
is moving to the
802 San Souci
Parkway. But
wait. Don's Deli
is still on West
End Road until
Wednesday
November 23.
Stop in and ask
questions.
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
409 Autos under
$5000
DODGE `95 DAKOTA
2WD V6. Regular
Cab/6Ft. 5 speed.
113,000 miles. Runs
like a champ. Needs
some work. $1,400.
570-814-1255
412 Autos for Sale
CADILLAC
`94 SEVILLE
8,900 original miles,
original owner,
black on black. Still
new. Serious buyers
only. $7,950
(570) 693-3938
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CHEVY 30 HOTROD COUPE
$49,000
FORD 76 THUNDERBIRD
All original $12,000
MERCEDES 76 450 SL
$24,000
MERCEDES 29
Kit Car $9,000
(570) 655-4884
hell-of-adeal.com
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
MODEL A FORD PARTS
Too many to list.
Call for list:
570-655-0607
554 Production/
Operations
MACHINE SHOP
SUPERVISOR WANTED
Looking for a
HANDS ON supervi-
sor/setup person
for our production
drilling and tapping
department. The
candidate should
be familiar with the
setup and operation
of multi-head
drilling and tapping
units and also dedi-
cated drilling and
tapping centers.
401k and health
benefits.
Apply in person:
Bardane
Manufacturing Co.,
301 Delaware St.
Jermyn, PA 18433
BUYING
US/FOREIGN/
CANADIAN
COINS &
CURRENCY
Paying
Highest
Coin Dealer Prices
Silver Dollars
All Gold Coins
Better Coins
& Collections
Top Dollar for
all US & Foreign
Silver Coins.
Proof Sets
Indian Head &
Wheat backs
Tokens &
medals
Bullion pieces
Sterling Silver
& Gold Jewelry
Local Postcards
& Advertising
Stamps
Vintage Toys &
Lead Soldiers
We give FREE
appraisals!
Over 35 years,
a respected
coin dealer.
HERITAGE
GALLERIES
DALLAS, PA
Across from
Dallas Agway
on Rt. 415
Look for blue
& white signs
TUES-FRI, 10-6
SAT, 10-5
570-674-2646
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
815 Dogs
SHIH TZU PUPPIES
2 females. First
shots & Vet
checked.
570-654-6730
570-881-3117
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
220 Wright Ave
Modern 3 bedroom
rancher. Woodburn-
ing fireplace in living
room. Gas heat.
Central air condi-
tioning. Aluminum
siding. Newer roof.
Nice yard. Extras.
MLS 11-4225
$105,000
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
912 Lots & Acreage
NEW PRICING!!!
EARTH
CONSERVANCY
LAND FOR SALE
*61 +/- Acres
Nuangola
$99,000
*46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.,
$79,000
*Highway
Commercial
KOZ Hanover Twp.
3 +/- Acres
11 +/- Acres
*Wilkes-Barre Twp.
32 +/- Acres
Zoned R-3
See additional Land
for Sale at
www.earth
conservancy.org
570-823-3445
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
915 Manufactured
Homes
ASHLEY PARK
Laurel Run & San
Souci Parks, Like
new, several to
choose from,
Financing&Warranty,
MobileOneSales.net
Call (570)250-2890
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
WE BUY HOUSES
570-472-3472
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
HANOVER TWP.
Lyndwood Ave.
3 bedrooms, 1st
floor, in nice
neighborhood.
Dishwasher, wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Parking, porch stor-
age. $600/per
month + utilities &
security deposit.
Call 904-382-4509
NANTICOKE
Two level, 1 bed-
room, 1 bathroom,
all appliances ,
sewer and garbage
included, off-street
parking, no pets,
quiet neighborhood
$460/per month,
plus 1 month secu-
rity.
Call (570)441-4101
PITTSTON
3 bedroom, living
room, kitchen, bath,
foyer & enclosed
porch. Off street
parking. On site
laundry. Tenant
pays electric,
sewage & trash.
Water included.
$650 + security.
(570) 881-1747
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
Small efficiency at
281 S. Franklin St;
3rd floor; kitch-
enette & bath. $400
per month includes
heat.
Call 570-333-5471
with references
WANTED TO RENT:
BY NOVEMBER 30
Home or 2 bed-
room apartment
in
Nanticoke.
Will pay top
dollar & 6
month advance.
Call 570-899-
5758
944 Commercial
Properties
WAREHOUSE
WILKES-BARRE
SMALL WARE-
HOUSE FOR RENT.
MUST SEE.
Call 570-817-3191
950 Half Doubles
PLYMOUTH
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Located on Acade-
my St. $695 + utili-
ties & security.
Small pet OK with
extra security.
Call (570)262-1577
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
953Houses for Rent
WEST PITTSTON
2 bedroom single
home for rent.
Washer dryer hook-
up. Stove & fridge
included. Call
570-430-3095
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
PHILADELPHIA With his
championship belt and a pair of
gloves drapedover his casket, Joe
Frazier was going one more
round.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson asked
mourners to rise, put their hands
together and for one last time
show your love for the former
heavyweight champion.
Muhammad Ali obliged.
Wearing a dark suit and sun-
glasses, a frail and trembling Ali
rose fromhis seat and vigorously
clapped for Smokin Joe, the
fighter who handed Ali his first
loss.
Ali was amongthe nearly 4,000
peoplewhopackedtheEnonTab-
ernacle Baptist Church for a two-
hour joyful celebration of Fra-
ziers life. He diedlast week of liv-
er cancer; he was 67. Also attend-
ing were former heavyweight
champion Larry Holmes and pro-
moter Don King.
His body ravaged by Parkin-
sons disease, Ali was accompa-
nied by members of his family
and wife, Lonnie, who rubbed his
back while he was seated and
held his hands as he entered and
left the church.
Jackson delivered a stirring eu-
logy, describing Frazier as some-
one whocame fromsegregation,
degradation and disgrace to
amazing grace.
Tell them Rocky was not a
champion. Joe Frazier was, he
said, referring to the hometown
character fromthe boxing movie,
Rocky, andwhose statue stands
at the base of the Philadelphia
Museumof Art. Tell themRocky
is fictitious, Joe was reality.
Rockys fists are frozen in stone.
Joes fists are smokin. Rocky nev-
er faced Ali or Holmes or Fore-
man. Rocky never tasted his own
blood. Champions are made in
the ring not in the movies. There
deserves to be a statue of Joe Fra-
zier in downtown Philadelphia.
Mike Tyson, a catch in his
voice, sent a videotaped message
of condolence as did real estate
magnate Donald Trump and ac-
tor Mickey Rourke. Fellow Phila-
delphia fighter, longtime middle-
weight champion Bernard Hop-
kins, also attended. The Rev. Al
Sharpton was forced to cancel
Monday morning.
We made history together,
said King, who promoted Alis
Rumble in the Jungle fight
against George Foreman, who
was knocked out in the eighth
round. We tried to make Amer-
ica better.
King, wearing a U.S. flag scarf
and clutching a mini-flag, walked
over to shake Alis hand before
thefuneral; Holmes greetedThe
Greatest when the service end-
ed with a 10-bell salute, box-
ings traditional 10-count farewell
to its own.
Thousands of mourners turn-
ed out Friday and Saturday for a
public memorial viewing at the
Wells Fargo Center.
Frazier beat Ali, knocking him
downandtaking a decisioninthe
Fight of the Century at Madison
Square Garden in1971. He would
go on to lose two more fights to
Ali, including the Thrilla in Ma-
nila bout.
Frazier was embittered for
years by Alis taunts and name-
calling, though he recently said
he had forgiven him.
Their epic trilogy was recalled
not only by speakers at the ser-
vice but those who sent letters to
be read at the ceremony. Rourke
got the biggest laugh when he
joked about Ali getting knocked
down by Frazier with Alis
friends and family laughing the
loudest.
Smokin Joe was a small yet fe-
rocious fighter who smothered
his opponents with punches, in-
cluding the devastating left hook
he used to end many of his fights
early. Thats what he usedtodrop
Ali in the 15th round of their epic
bout at MSG.
Whilethat fight is celebratedin
boxing lore, Ali and Frazier put
on an even better show in their
third fight, held in a sweltering
arena in Manila as part of Alis
world tour of fights in1975. Near-
ly blinded by Alis punches, Fra-
zier still wanted to go out for the
15th round, but was held back by
trainer Eddie Futch. The bout,
Ali would later say, was the clos-
est thing to death he could imag-
ine.
Frazier won the heavyweight
title in 1970 by stopping Jimmy
Ellis in the fifth round of their
fight at Madison Square Garden.
Frazier defended it successfully
four times before George Fore-
manknockedhimdownsixtimes
in the first two rounds to take the
title from him in 1973.
Frazier would never be heavy-
weight champion again.
B O X I N G
Thousands honor Smokin Joe
Legendary boxer was laid to
rest as well-known figures
paid tribute with eulogies.
By DAN GELSTON
AP Sports Writer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former boxing champion Muhammad Ali leaves after a memorial
service for boxing legend Joe Frazier at the Enon Tabernacle
Baptist Church on Monday in Philadelphia.
MELBOURNE, Australia
Fred Couples got word Monday
afternoon that Steve Stricker
wanted to speak with him, and
the U.S. captain quickly drove
away. Moments later, he and
Stricker were sharing a laugh on
the putting green.
Stricker was in great spirits at
the Presidents Cup, and his left
arm felt close to the same.
Its been good, Stricker said
of a neckinjury that causedweak-
ness in his left arm toward the
end of the FedEx Cup playoffs in
September. Tobe honest, it feels
like it did all year long.
About an hour later, Couples
was over at theshort gameareaat
Royal Melbourne watching Hun-
ter Mahan hit chip shots, pleased
to know that weekend rest made
another of his American players
feel good as new.
Health no longer seems to be a
big issue for the American team.
Stricker presented the biggest
concern, not only as the highest-
ranked American at Royal Amer-
ican (No. 5), but as the partner
for Tiger Woods when they won
all four of their matches two
years ago at Harding Park in an-
other U.S. victory.
The pain in his neck began a
year ago when he was in a deer
stand during the offseason, tak-
ing aim with his bow when his
left armcollapsed. Exercise got it
up to full strength again, and
Stricker went on to win the Me-
morial and the John Deere Clas-
sic.
G O L F
Rest helps American team to feel good
The Associated Press
C M Y K
Airline fined for delays
The Transportation Department is
fining a regional affiliate of American
Airlines $900,000 for keeping pas-
sengers cooped up on planes for over
three hours in Chicago earlier this year.
The department said Monday that
American Eagle Airlines had tarmac
delays of more than three hours on 15
flights arriving at OHare on May 29. A
total of 608 passengers were aboard the
delayed flights.
Coming on the eve of the busy holi-
day travel season, the fine is a clear
warning to airlines that the govern-
ment wont tolerate similar incidents.
Buffett buys 5% of IBM
Investor Warren Buffett says his
company, Berkshire Hathaway Inc.,
bought about $10.7 billion of IBM stock
this year, giving it a stake of more than
5 percent in the technology company.
Buffett has long refused to invest in
high-tech companies because he has
said its too difficult to predict which
technology businesses will prosper in
the long run.
Buffett says he believes IBM has a
sound plan for the future. Buffett said
Berkshire paid an average of about
$170 per share for the IBM stock.
Plane makers score orders
Airbus on Monday fattened an order
for its new A320neo jets and Boeing
snagged another customer for the 787
at the Dubai Airshow as Mideast
buyers showed they remain bullish
despite the uncertain global economy.
The deals, which followed a record
$18 billion airplane order from Dubai
airline Emirates the day before, added
ammunition to forecasts from the two
major aircraft manufacturers that pre-
dicted the region will continue to gen-
erate hundreds of billions of dollars in
demand for new planes for years to
come.
BofA selling China stake
Bank of America is selling most of its
remaining shares in China Construc-
tion Bank, expecting an after-tax gain
of about $1.8 billion.
It said Monday that about 10.4 bil-
lion shares will be sold through private
transactions with a group of investors.
Bank of America will hold about 1
percent of the Chinese companys com-
mon shares after the transactions close.
The bank has taken several steps
recently to sell non-core assets.
I N B R I E F
$3.44 $2.94 $3.48
$4.06
07/17/08
JPMorgCh 32.55 -.73 -23.3
JacobsEng 38.14 -.82 -16.8
JohnJn 64.91 -.34 +4.9
JohnsnCtl 31.72 -.13 -17.0
Kellogg 49.65 -.07 -2.8
Keycorp 7.22 -.25 -18.4
KimbClk 71.17 +.07 +12.9
KindME 75.70 +.45 +7.7
Kroger 23.14 -.29 +3.5
Kulicke 10.75 +.23 +49.3
LSI Corp 5.85 -.09 -2.3
LillyEli 37.65 -.20 +7.4
Limited 43.69 -.25 +42.2
LincNat 19.81 -.41 -28.8
LizClaib 8.76 ... +22.3
LockhdM 77.35 -.07 +10.6
Loews 38.93 -.57 +.1
LaPac 6.82 +.04 -27.9
MDU Res 20.43 -.15 +.8
MarathnO s 27.67 -.51 +23.1
MarIntA 31.17 -.45 -25.0
Masco 9.39 -.16 -25.8
McDrmInt 11.76 -.09 -43.2
McGrwH 42.59 -.63 +17.0
McKesson 82.51 -.26 +17.2
Merck 35.67 -.30 -1.0
NCR Corp 18.85 +.30 +22.6
NatFuGas 59.27 +.08 -9.7
NatGrid 49.66 -.84 +11.9
NY Times 7.07 -.11 -27.9
NewellRub 16.22 +.02 -10.8
NewmtM 69.48 -1.01 +13.1
NextEraEn 55.27 -.55 +6.3
NiSource 22.07 -.40 +25.3
NikeB 95.75 -.40 +12.1
NorflkSo 75.01 -.68 +19.4
NoestUt 34.45 -.63 +8.1
NorthropG 58.85 -.45 +.1
NustarEn 56.69 +.66 -18.4
NvMAd 14.34 +.15 +9.6
OGE Engy 52.03 -.74 +14.3
OcciPet 97.81 -2.00 -.3
OfficeMax 5.51 -.10 -68.9
Olin 19.11 -.21 -6.9
ONEOK 78.21 -.50 +41.0
PG&E Cp 40.02 -.32 -16.3
PPG 87.29 -.82 +3.8
PPL Corp 29.86 -.38 +13.4
PennVaRs 25.60 -.06 -9.6
Pfizer 19.79 -.20 +13.0
PinWst 46.32 -.56 +11.7
PitnyBw 19.31 -.13 -20.1
Praxair 101.39 -.10 +6.2
ProgrssEn 53.24 -.53 +22.4
ProvEn g 9.37 +.11 +17.9
PSEG 33.60 -.43 +5.6
PulteGrp 5.54 -.22 -26.3
Questar 19.60 -.15 +12.6
RadioShk 13.05 -.09 -29.4
RLauren 156.11 +.61 +40.7
Raytheon 45.13 -.41 -1.8
ReynAm s 38.72 -.18 +18.7
RockwlAut 73.59 -1.04 +2.6
Rowan 34.81 -.78 -.3
RoyDShllB 72.65 ... +9.0
RoyDShllA 70.63 -.10 +5.8
Ryder 52.99 -.12 +.7
Safeway 19.94 -.13 -11.3
SaraLee 18.66 -.09 +6.6
Schlmbrg 75.62 -.92 -9.4
Sherwin 85.99 -.59 +2.7
SonyCp 17.51 -.03 -51.0
SouthnCo 43.55 -.39 +13.9
SwstAirl 8.19 -.02 -36.9
SpectraEn 28.93 -.34 +15.8
SprintNex 2.86 -.05 -32.4
Sunoco 36.79 +.32 -8.7
Sysco 27.65 -.10 -6.0
TECO 18.53 -.29 +4.1
Target 52.65 -.12 -12.4
TenetHlth 5.13 -.06 -23.3
Tenneco 30.53 -.43 -25.8
Tesoro 27.18 -1.03 +46.6
TexInst 31.16 -.34 -4.1
Textron 18.74 +.05 -20.7
3M Co 81.87 -.42 -5.1
TimeWarn 34.62 -.59 +7.6
Titan Intl 22.60 +.14 +15.7
UnilevNV 33.36 -.57 +6.2
UnionPac 102.97 +.09 +11.1
Unisys 25.58 -.41 -1.2
USSteel 26.39 +.25 -54.8
UtdTech 79.05 -.78 +.4
VarianMed 57.05 -.85 -17.7
VectorGp 17.29 -.23 +4.8
ViacomB 45.05 +.15 +13.7
WestarEn 27.26 -.28 +8.3
Weyerh 16.46 -.43 -13.0
Whrlpl 53.79 -.80 -39.4
WmsCos 30.60 -.74 +23.8
Windstrm 11.79 -.20 -15.4
Wynn 125.02 -.44 +20.4
XcelEngy 25.94 -.37 +10.1
Xerox 8.15 -.06 -29.3
YumBrnds 55.29 -.52 +12.7
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
BalShrB m 14.38 -.12 +4.4
CoreOppA m 12.08 -.08 +5.0
American Cent
IncGroA m 24.19 -.23 +1.8
ValueInv 5.53 -.05 -2.2
American Funds
AMCAPA m 18.94 -.15 +1.0
BalA m 18.23 -.10 +3.4
BondA m 12.54 ... +5.8
CapIncBuA m49.15 -.33 +1.3
CpWldGrIA m32.74 -.37 -6.5
EurPacGrA m36.92 -.41 -10.8
FnInvA m 35.61 -.34 -2.0
GrthAmA m 29.40 -.23 -3.4
HiIncA m 10.72 ... +1.3
IncAmerA m 16.55 -.12 +3.0
InvCoAmA m 27.22 -.24 -2.0
MutualA m 25.53 -.19 +2.7
NewPerspA m27.05 -.28 -5.5
NwWrldA m 48.61 -.55 -11.0
SmCpWldA m33.96 -.39 -12.6
WAMutInvA m28.11 -.22 +5.1
Baron
Asset b 55.14 -.47 -0.2
BlackRock
GlobAlcA m 19.12 ... -0.8
GlobAlcC m 17.80 ... -1.4
GlobAlcI d 19.22 ... -0.6
CGM
Focus 27.49 -.14 -21.0
Mutual 25.64 -.13 -13.0
Realty 25.96 -.58 -2.5
Columbia
AcornZ 28.85 -.32 -3.2
DFA
EmMktValI 28.35 -.25 -20.6
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.18 -.02 -2.9
HlthCareS d 25.35 -.17 +4.1
LAEqS d 43.42 -.49 -18.3
Davis
NYVentA m 32.87 -.35 -4.3
NYVentC m 31.58 -.34 -4.9
Dodge & Cox
Bal 67.32 -.68 -2.4
Income 13.36 -.01 +4.1
IntlStk 30.93 -.37 -13.4
Stock 101.06 -1.30 -5.1
Dreyfus
TechGrA f 32.82 -.10 +1.0
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.23 ... +3.1
HiIncOppB m 4.24 ... +2.4
NatlMuniA m 9.23 -.06 +8.8
NatlMuniB m 9.23 -.06 +8.1
PAMuniA m 8.71 -.05 +6.1
Fairholme Funds
Fairhome d 26.17 -.28 -26.4
Fidelity
AstMgr20 12.92 -.03 +2.5
Bal 18.30 -.11 +1.7
BlChGrow 43.74 -.31 +0.2
CapInc d 8.82 -.07 -1.9
Contra 68.79 -.48 +1.7
DivrIntl d 27.08 -.31 -10.2
ExpMulNat d 20.70 -.22 -3.9
Free2020 13.62 -.08 -0.9
Free2025 11.25 -.08 -2.0
Free2030 13.37 -.10 -2.5
GNMA 11.83 -.01 +6.8
GrowCo 85.89 -.47 +3.3
LatinAm d 51.70 -.63 -12.4
LowPriStk d 36.27 -.33 +1.1
Magellan 64.08 -.62 -10.5
Overseas d 28.49 -.56 -12.3
Puritan 17.77 -.11 +0.5
StratInc 11.11 -.03 +4.4
TotalBd 10.94 +.01 +6.5
Value 64.01 -.83 -6.8
Fidelity Advisor
ValStratT m 23.64 -.30 -8.7
Fidelity Select
Gold d 50.55 -.79 -1.1
Pharm d 13.02 -.09 +7.7
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 44.41 -.42 +1.3
500IdxInstl 44.41 -.42 NA
500IdxInv 44.41 -.42 +1.3
First Eagle
GlbA m 46.76 -.29 +0.9
FrankTemp-Frank
Fed TF A m 11.99 -.02 +9.9
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 7.00 -.01 +8.7
GrowB m 42.89 -.29 +0.2
Income A m 2.09 -.01 +1.6
Income C m 2.11 ... +1.1
FrankTemp-Mutual
Beacon Z 11.80 -.10 -2.9
Discov Z 27.65 -.28 -4.0
Euro Z 19.10 -.14 -9.1
Shares Z 20.02 -.19 -2.8
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBond A m 12.96 -.07 -1.1
GlBond C m 12.98 -.07 -1.5
GlBondAdv 12.92 -.07 -0.9
Growth A m 16.94 -.18 -4.8
GMO
QuVI 21.76 -.14 +10.0
Harbor
CapApInst 38.55 -.18 +5.0
IntlInstl d 54.81 -.81 -9.5
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
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HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
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Combined Stocks
AFLAC 44.31 -.23 -21.5
AMR 2.14 -.11 -72.5
AT&T Inc 29.19 -.23 -.6
AbtLab 54.24 -.29 +13.2
AMD 5.79 -.16 -29.2
Alcoa 10.38 -.22 -32.6
Allstate 26.49 -.15 -16.9
Altria 27.62 -.16 +12.2
AEP 39.07 -.45 +8.6
AmExp 49.45 -.92 +15.2
AmIntlGrp 23.54 -.31 -51.2
Amgen 57.33 -.53 +4.4
Anadarko 79.28 -1.44 +4.1
AutoData 51.64 -.52 +11.6
AveryD 26.54 +.51 -37.3
Avnet 30.32 -.52 -8.2
Avon 17.85 -.38 -38.6
BP PLC 43.57 -.44 -1.4
BakrHu 57.28 -.92 +.2
BarnesNob 15.40 -.37 +8.8
Baxter 53.97 -.69 +6.6
Beam Inc 50.51 -.12 +8.4
BerkH B 75.86 -1.11 -5.3
BigLots 40.96 -.34 +34.5
BlockHR 15.61 -.30 +31.1
Bluegreen 2.98 +.94 -7.5
Boeing 67.94 +1.02 +4.1
BrMySq 31.51 -.28 +19.0
Brunswick 16.78 -.46 -10.5
Buckeye 64.65 +.04 -3.3
CBS B 26.08 -.17 +36.9
CMS Eng 20.80 -.41 +11.8
CSX s 22.31 -.18 +3.6
CampSp 33.58 -.21 -3.4
Carnival 33.18 -.29 -28.0
Caterpillar 96.53 +.40 +3.1
CenterPnt 19.25 -.35 +22.5
CntryLink 37.57 -.26 -18.6
Chevron 106.17 -.88 +16.4
Citigrp rs 28.38 -.95 -40.0
Clorox 65.88 +.25 +4.1
ColgPal 88.65 -.52 +10.3
ConAgra 24.92 +.15 +10.4
ConocPhil 71.70 -.44 +5.3
ConEd 58.37 -.67 +17.8
ConstellEn 40.50 -.35 +32.2
Cooper Ind 53.91 -.79 -7.5
Corning 15.34 +.23 -20.6
CrownHold 32.69 -.51 -2.1
Cummins 99.41 +.69 -9.6
DPL 30.13 -.06 +17.2
DTE 51.65 -.61 +14.0
Deere 74.70 -1.09 -10.1
Diebold 31.90 -.37 -.5
Disney 36.12 -.58 -3.7
DomRescs 51.73 -.33 +21.1
Dover 55.96 -.31 -4.3
DowChm 27.86 -.33 -18.4
DuPont 48.25 -.27 -3.3
DukeEngy 20.83 -.17 +17.0
EMC Cp 24.46 -.18 +6.8
EKodak 1.10 -.02 -79.5
Eaton s 46.10 +.46 -9.2
EdisonInt 40.50 -.27 +4.9
EmersonEl 50.96 -.40 -10.9
EnbrEPt s 29.98 +.53 -3.9
Energen 50.79 -.73 +5.2
EngyTEq 37.62 -.18 -3.7
Entergy 69.00 -.95 -2.6
EntPrPt 45.48 +.44 +9.3
Exelon 44.65 -.41 +7.2
ExxonMbl 78.96 -.76 +8.0
FMC Corp 82.28 -1.16 +3.0
Fastenal s 41.23 +.05 +37.6
FedExCp 81.41 -.82 -12.5
FirstEngy 44.72 -.73 +20.8
FootLockr 22.86 -.36 +16.5
FordM 11.02 -.12 -34.4
Gannett 11.32 -.25 -25.0
Gap 20.17 -.16 -8.5
GenDynam 65.31 -.41 -8.0
GenElec 16.10 -.20 -12.0
GenMills 39.28 -.28 +10.4
GileadSci 40.46 -.62 +11.6
GlaxoSKln 44.27 -.54 +12.9
Goodrich 122.87 +.07 +39.5
Goodyear 13.72 -.21 +15.8
Hallibrtn 38.53 -.06 -5.6
HarleyD 39.37 -.11 +13.6
HarrisCorp 37.71 -.58 -16.8
HartfdFn 17.53 -.06 -33.8
HawaiiEl 26.18 -.44 +14.9
HeclaM 6.55 -.15 -41.8
Heico s 59.43 -.76 +45.6
Hess 64.12 -.97 -16.2
HewlettP 27.32 -.26 -35.1
HomeDp 38.25 +.19 +9.1
HonwllIntl 54.71 -.08 +2.9
Humana 87.72 -.39 +60.2
ITT Cp s 19.97 +.09 +15.6
ITW 46.34 -.59 -13.2
IngerRd 31.19 -.22 -33.8
IBM 187.35 -.03 +27.7
IntFlav 54.17 -.28 -2.6
IntPap 28.15 -.47 +3.3
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 72.26 AirProd APD 2.32 85.54 -.92 -5.9
31.49 23.84 AmWtrWks AWK .92 30.93 -.23 +22.3
51.50 36.76 Amerigas APU 2.96 43.17 +.23 -11.6
23.79 19.28 AquaAm WTR .66 22.09 -.34 -1.7
38.02 23.69 ArchDan ADM .70 29.78 +.09 -1.0
337.96 246.26 AutoZone AZO ... 336.23 -1.43 +23.3
15.31 5.13 BkofAm BAC .04 6.05 -.16 -54.6
32.50 17.10 BkNYMel BK .52 20.55 -.96 -32.0
17.49 3.70 BonTon BONT .20 3.52 -.28 -72.2
39.50 29.45 CVS Care CVS .50 38.77 -.47 +11.5
52.95 35.46 Cigna CI .04 43.74 -.03 +19.3
71.77 61.29 CocaCola KO 1.88 67.79 -.33 +3.1
27.16 19.19 Comcast CMCSA .45 22.21 -.31 +1.6
28.95 21.67 CmtyBkSy CBU 1.04 25.32 -.50 -8.8
42.50 14.61 CmtyHlt CYH ... 21.03 -.36 -43.7
38.69 29.57 CoreMark CORE .68 36.83 +.03 +3.5
64.56 39.50 EmersonEl EMR 1.60 50.96 -.40 -10.9
13.63 4.61 Entercom ETM ... 4.97 -.05 -57.1
21.02 10.25 FairchldS FCS ... 14.23 -.29 -8.8
9.84 5.33 FrontierCm FTR .75 5.56 -.13 -42.9
18.16 13.09 Genpact G .18 16.01 -.28 +5.3
13.74 7.00 HarteHnk HHS .32 9.05 -.08 -29.1
55.00 46.99 Heinz HNZ 1.92 53.61 -.03 +8.4
60.96 45.67 Hershey HSY 1.38 56.08 -.91 +18.9
36.30 29.80 Kraft KFT 1.16 35.43 -.14 +12.4
27.45 18.07 Lowes LOW .56 23.50 +.39 -6.3
91.05 66.40 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 72.01 -1.90 -17.3
95.45 72.14 McDnlds MCD 2.80 94.06 -.70 +22.5
24.98 17.05 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 20.93 -.93 -13.3
10.28 4.25 NexstarB NXST ... 9.08 -.26 +51.6
65.19 42.70 PNC PNC 1.40 52.81 -1.06 -13.0
30.27 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 1.40 29.86 -.38 +13.4
20.63 13.16 PennMill PMIC ... 20.30 +.10 +53.4
17.34 6.50 PenRE PEI .60 9.24 -.52 -36.4
71.89 58.50 PepsiCo PEP 2.06 62.80 -.48 -3.9
72.74 55.85 PhilipMor PM 3.08 71.21 -.43 +21.7
67.72 57.56 ProctGam PG 2.10 63.05 -.84 -2.0
67.52 42.45 Prudentl PRU 1.45 53.55 -.50 -8.8
1.47 .85 RiteAid RAD ... 1.28 -.05 +45.0
17.11 10.91 SLM Cp SLM .40 13.79 -.41 +9.5
60.00 39.65 SLM pfB SLMpB 4.63 42.29 ... -3.5
44.65 23.60 SoUnCo SUG .60 42.01 -.11 +74.5
61.50 42.55 TJX TJX .76 60.57 -.77 +36.4
33.53 24.07 UGI Corp UGI 1.04 29.23 -.18 -7.4
38.95 31.60 VerizonCm VZ 2.00 37.00 -.52 +3.4
59.40 48.31 WalMart WMT 1.46 58.89 -.31 +9.2
42.20 36.52 WeisMk WMK 1.20 39.28 -.62 -2.6
34.25 22.58 WellsFargo WFC .48 25.10 -.55 -19.0
USD per British Pound 1.5898 -.0162 -1.02% 1.6174 1.6146
Canadian Dollar 1.0174 +.0041 +.40% .9682 1.0098
USD per Euro 1.3616 -.0131 -.96% 1.4110 1.3693
Japanese Yen 77.12 -.05 -.06% 80.84 82.45
Mexican Peso 13.5342 -.0100 -.07% 11.7298 12.3375
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 3.49 3.46 +0.68 -12.31 -11.15
Gold 1777.80 1787.50 -0.54 +19.04 +29.92
Platinum 1644.10 1646.70 -0.16 -7.08 -2.47
Silver 34.01 34.67 -1.90 -2.85 +30.38
Palladium 664.20 662.70 +0.23 -5.98 -2.40
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
Hartford
CpApHLSIA 38.21 -.41 -9.8
INVESCO
ConstellB m 19.78 -.15 -5.5
GlobEqA m 10.51 ... -3.4
PacGrowB m 18.53 -.13 -17.0
Ivy
AssetStrA m 24.00 -.19 -1.7
AssetStrC m 23.18 -.18 -2.3
JPMorgan
CoreBondSelect11.85 -.01 +6.7
John Hancock
LifBa1 b 12.56 -.07 -1.4
LifGr1 b 12.37 -.10 -3.7
RegBankA m 12.33 -.29 -15.5
SovInvA m 15.53 -.12 -0.4
TaxFBdA m 9.94 -.01 +8.3
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 18.94 -.11 -12.7
Longleaf Partners
LongPart 26.57 -.37 -3.6
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.25 -.05 +4.3
BondR b 14.19 -.05 +4.0
MFS
MAInvA m 18.97 -.21 -0.9
MAInvC m 18.28 -.21 -1.5
Merger
Merger m 15.96 -.02 +1.1
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.45 +.01 +4.9
Neuberger Berman
SmCpGrInv 17.66 -.15 -1.2
Oakmark
EqIncI 27.83 -.15 +0.3
Oppenheimer
CapApB m 38.48 -.23 -0.1
DevMktA m 31.73 -.27 -13.0
DevMktY 31.47 -.26 -12.8
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.08 -.04 +3.2
ComRlRStI 7.94 -.07 -2.9
HiYldIs 8.98 ... +2.9
LowDrIs 10.32 -.01 +1.2
RealRet 12.26 ... +11.6
TotRetA m 10.87 ... +2.7
TotRetAdm b 10.87 ... +2.9
TotRetC m 10.87 ... +2.1
TotRetIs 10.87 ... +3.1
TotRetrnD b 10.87 ... +2.8
TotlRetnP 10.87 ... +3.0
Permanent
Portfolio 48.68 -.32 +6.3
Principal
SAMConGrB m12.89 -.11 -1.8
Prudential
JenMCGrA m 28.43 -.19 +3.8
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 16.05 -.11 +1.0
BlendA m 16.92 -.14 -1.7
EqOppA m 13.70 -.12 -1.3
HiYieldA m 5.34 ... +3.4
IntlEqtyA m 5.60 -.08 -9.5
IntlValA m 18.41 -.24 -10.6
JennGrA m 18.89 -.09 +4.7
NaturResA m 50.04 -.64 -12.3
SmallCoA m 19.93 -.18 -1.8
UtilityA m 10.59 -.13 +5.2
ValueA m 14.05 -.17 -4.6
Putnam
GrowIncB m 12.51 -.14 -5.7
IncomeA m 6.82 +.02 +5.1
Royce
LowStkSer m 16.38 -.23 -10.3
OpportInv d 10.36 -.17 -14.2
ValPlSvc m 12.40 -.15 -7.6
Schwab
S&P500Sel d 19.82 -.19 +1.3
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 39.75 -.25 +4.2
CapApprec 20.83 -.11 +2.6
DivGrow 23.20 -.23 +2.5
DivrSmCap d 16.13 -.15 +2.0
EmMktStk d 30.61 -.20 -13.2
EqIndex d 33.80 -.32 +1.1
EqtyInc 22.84 -.25 -2.2
FinSer 11.85 -.22 -16.4
GrowStk 32.70 -.21 +1.7
HealthSci 32.36 -.11 +6.9
IntlDisc d 38.91 -.45 -11.3
IntlStk d 12.98 -.19 -8.8
IntlStkAd m 12.92 -.19 -8.9
LatinAm d 45.85 -.62 -19.2
MediaTele 52.82 -.35 +2.1
MidCpGr 58.63 -.52 +0.2
NewAmGro 33.58 -.25 +1.8
NewAsia d 17.71 -.07 -7.7
NewEra 46.70 -.60 -10.5
NewIncome 9.69 +.01 +5.2
Rtmt2020 16.38 -.13 -0.4
Rtmt2030 17.02 -.16 -1.5
ShTmBond 4.83 +.01 +1.6
TaxFHiYld d 10.81 -.01 +8.7
Value 22.79 -.27 -2.4
ValueAd b 22.52 -.27 -2.6
Thornburg
IntlValI d 25.64 -.16 -9.3
Tweedy Browne
GlobVal d 22.41 -.16 -5.9
Vanguard
500Adml 115.58 -1.10 +1.3
500Inv 115.56 -1.10 +1.2
CapOp d 31.50 -.23 -5.2
CapVal 9.66 -.13 -12.3
Convrt d 12.25 -.07 -6.4
DevMktIdx d 8.99 -.15 -10.6
DivGr 15.19 -.13 +6.7
EnergyInv d 65.85 -.75 +2.2
EurIdxAdm d 55.22 -1.10 -9.5
Explr 72.29 -.78 -0.9
GNMA 11.11 +.01 +6.4
GNMAAdml 11.11 +.01 +6.5
GlbEq 16.58 -.19 -7.2
GrowthEq 11.05 -.07 +2.4
HYCor d 5.66 ... +5.6
HYCorAdml d 5.66 ... +5.7
HltCrAdml d 55.88 -.35 +9.0
HlthCare d 132.37 -.83 +9.0
ITGradeAd 10.12 +.02 +7.0
InfPrtAdm 28.24 +.05 +13.6
InfPrtI 11.50 +.02 +13.6
InflaPro 14.38 +.03 +13.6
InstIdxI 114.82 -1.09 +1.3
InstPlus 114.82 -1.09 +1.3
InstTStPl 28.30 -.28 +0.5
IntlExpIn d 13.95 -.18 -16.3
IntlGr d 17.36 -.25 -10.2
IntlStkIdxAdm d23.26 -.30 -11.7
LTInvGr 10.30 +.08 +15.6
MidCapGr 19.48 -.14 +2.5
MidCpAdml 90.66 -.95 -1.6
MidCpIst 20.03 -.21 -1.6
MuIntAdml 13.78 -.02 +7.3
MuLtdAdml 11.09 ... +2.9
MuShtAdml 15.90 ... +1.4
PrecMtls d 24.03 -.59 -10.0
Prmcp d 65.32 -.42 -0.7
PrmcpAdml d 67.82 -.44 -0.7
PrmcpCorI d 13.73 -.10 -0.3
REITIdx d 18.62 -.41 +3.8
REITIdxAd d 79.46 -1.77 +3.9
STCor 10.68 ... +2.0
STGradeAd 10.68 ... +2.0
SelValu d 18.76 -.18 0.0
SmGthIdx 21.69 -.25 -1.0
SmGthIst 21.76 -.25 -0.9
StSmCpEq 19.12 -.25 +1.3
Star 19.14 -.10 +1.2
StratgcEq 18.77 -.19 +2.5
TgtRe2015 12.62 -.07 +1.6
TgtRe2020 22.23 -.15 +0.6
TgtRe2030 21.45 -.18 -1.1
TgtRe2035 12.83 -.12 -2.0
Tgtet2025 12.59 -.09 -0.2
TotBdAdml 11.01 +.02 +6.9
TotBdInst 11.01 +.02 +6.9
TotBdMkInv 11.01 +.02 +6.8
TotBdMkSig 11.01 +.02 +6.9
TotIntl d 13.90 -.19 -11.8
TotStIAdm 31.28 -.30 +0.4
TotStIIns 31.28 -.30 +0.5
TotStIdx 31.26 -.31 +0.3
TxMIntlAdm d10.35 -.17 -10.6
TxMSCAdm 26.83 -.41 -1.2
USGro 18.52 -.13 +1.5
USValue 10.22 -.12 +1.2
WellsI 22.71 -.04 +7.5
WellsIAdm 55.03 -.08 +7.6
Welltn 31.15 -.19 +2.4
WelltnAdm 53.80 -.33 +2.4
WndsIIAdm 45.64 -.50 +1.3
WndsrII 25.71 -.28 +1.2
Wells Fargo
DvrCpBldA f 6.47 -.05 -4.0
DOW
12,078.98
-74.70
NASDAQ
2,657.22
-21.53
S&P 500
1,251.78
-12.07
RUSSELL 2000
732.89
-11.75
6-MO T-BILLS
.04%
+.01
10-YR T-NOTE
2.06%
...
CRUDE OIL
$98.14
-.85
q q p p q q q q
n n q q q q q q
NATURAL GAS
$3.46
-.12
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011
timesleader.com
DUAL-CORE proc-
essor, 4G LTE tech-
nology, and an 8
megapixel camera all
crammed into a case
thats only 7.1 millim-
eters (0.28 inches)
thick.
Youd think it would be difficult to
make a new iPhone look clunky, but
Motorola has pulled it off with the
new Droid RAZR.
Its being billed as the worlds thin-
nest smartphone. Usually getting that
accolade means sacrificing power,
battery life or some other important
functionality.
That hasnt happened here. The
RAZR is also one of the fastest, most
powerful smartphones around.
Despite that, the phone is so thin
that Motorola engineers had to flare
the top of the case slightly to accom-
modate the headphone jack, USB, and
HDMI ports.
The phone is extremely light
weighing in at a miniscule 127 grams,
or 4.5 ounces.
I was initially concerned this would
make the device fragile.
This proved not to be the case it
stood up to normal use, which for me
includes a certain amount of negli-
gence. I tossed it into my laptop case,
it was buried under tablets on my
desk, shoved in a drawer, and on one
occasion dropped accidentally. It sur-
vived all of this abuse with no signs of
damage.
It was only later that I realized this
was because the RAZR is protected by
a Corning Gorilla Glass display and a
KEVLAR reinforced back plate.
As always, the
shape is distinctly
Droid.
It has the trade-
mark flair and
shape that marks it
as a descendent of
the Droid X, al-
though in this case
its been refined
the corners have a
bit of a diagonal
tilt to them, mak-
ing the phone fit
more comfortably
into ones hand. The Droid RAZR runs
on Android 2.3.5 (a.k.a. Ginger-
bread), and is powered by a dual-core
1.2GHz processor. It also sports 1GB of
ram. Coupled with Verizons 4G LTE
network, its extremely fast.
The RAZRs 8MP cameracan be
started from the initial lock screen
meaning you dont have to hunt
around for the camera app or spend
time unlocking the phone if youre
trying to quickly take a picture.
The RAZR also has a front-facing
720 pixel HD webcam that can take 1.3
megapixel images.
The RAZR features the MotoCast
app, which allows you to download or
stream content from your personal
computers to the phone so you can
be away from home or out of the office
and still have access to crucial files.
In addition, the RAZR features ad-
vanced government-grade encryption
for e-mail, calendar and contacts, as
well as a WebTop app that lets the
phone be hooked up to a larger dis-
play, allowing for efficient multi-task-
ing and provides access to a fully-
featured version of Mozilla Firefox.
As a top-of-the-line smartphone, the
Razr costs $299.99 with a two-year
contract. Retail price with no contract
is $649.99.
NICK DeLORENZO
T E C H T A L K
Droid RAZR slices through competition with cutting-edge tools
MINNEAPOLIS A Target employ-
ee is protesting the Minneapolis-based
retailers decision to open its doors for
Black Friday at midnight on Thanksgiv-
ing, sayingthe demandonits employees
is going a step too far.
Target saidit wouldopenits doors five
hours earlier this year for Black Friday
shoppers eager to hunt for discounted
gifts. But Target employee Anthony
Hardwick says thats unfair to employ-
ees who want to celebrate Thanksgiving
with their families.
More than 6,700 people have signed
his petition on advocacy website
Change.org, calling for Target to reverse
its decision. Hardwick, who works for
Target in Nebraska, hopes to get 50,000
signatures.
With the midnight opening, employ-
ees like myself will have to leave for
work right in the middle of Thanksgiv-
ing dinner, Hardwick said in a state-
ment. We dont mind hard work, but
cutting into our holidays is a step too
far.
Target is among several retailers that
plan to open at midnight on Thanksgiv-
ing, including the Mall of America and
Macys.
In Denver, Target is opening its 29
stores from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Thanks-
giving Day. According to a news release,
the Denver test will help the retailer de-
cide whether to open in other markets
on future Thanksgivings.
Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder
said the retailer will pay employees who
work on Thanksgiving with holiday pay
andits store leaders eachyear workwith
employees to accommodate personal
scheduling needs.
Black Friday
Target opening
time protested
By WENDY LEE
Star Tribune
A
report released today shows
that Allied Services in Scranton
had the fourth-highest number
of beds of any rehabilitation hospital
in the state but the second-lowest oc-
cupancy rate in fiscal year 2010.
The 36-page report focuses onthe fi-
nancial health of the states non-gener-
al acute care facilities, which include
rehabilitation, psychiatric, long-term
acute care and specialty hospitals. In
addition to Allied Services, area facil-
ities that were examined were John
Heinz Institute of Rehabilitation Med-
icine inWilkes-Barre Township, which
is a divisionof Allied, Kindred/Wyom-
ing Valley at Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital, Mercy Special Care in Nanti-
coke and First Hospital in Kingston.
The report found most local special-
tyhospitals makingmorethanaverage
profits. Allied Services is the excep-
tion.
Statewide, the average operating
margin for rehabilitation hospitals im-
proved from 10.23 percent in fiscal
year 2009 to 10.37 in fiscal year 2010.
The increased operating margins oc-
curred while the number of patients
receiving rehab care dropped 3.3 per-
cent and for those who received care,
the number of patient days decreased
2 percent.
AlliedServices inScrantonreported
an operating margin of 4.35 percent.
The other nonprofit facility, John
Heinz Institute of Rehabilitation Med-
icine inWilkes-Barre Township, which
is a division of Allied, reported a mar-
gin of 2.29 percent.
Their margins were lower than the
statewide average of 6.36 percent for
nonprofit hospitals that provide phys-
ical rehabilitation through medical
and other services.
Both had equal net patient revenues
last year compared to 2009; Allied
with $36 million and $35 million for
JohnHeinz. Statewide, average net pa-
tient revenue was $45 million in 2010,
an increase of $1 million.
Alliedreportedanoccupancy rate of
43.43 percent for its 135-bed facility.
Only HealthSouth Nittany in State
College, with a 40.13 rate, showed a
lower-occupancy rate among the 20
freestanding rehabilitation hospitals
in the state. By comparison, John
Heinz had a 79.92 percent occupancy
rate for its 92-bed facility.
A message left with an Allied Ser-
vices spokesmanwas not immediately
returned Monday.
In the psychiatric hospital category,
First Hospital fared well compared to
the other 11 for-profit facilities in the
state. An operating margin of 20.59
percent and a three-year average total
margin of 9.03 percent both were
above the state averages of 10.64 and
6.87 respectively. Year-to-year, while
the statewide operating margin de-
clined 1.81 percentage points, First
Hospitals margin increased by 7.03
percentage points.
First Hospital and other facilities of
Wyoming Valley Health Care System
were purchased in May 2009 by for-
profit Community Health System.
Kindreds Wyoming Valley oper-
ation inside Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital also had a better-than-aver-
age operating margin. The long-term
acute care facilitys margin of 11.37
percent last year easily topped the
state average of 6.81percent for the 23
for-profit facilities in this category.
Profits up for most
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Allied Services division in Wilkes-Barre Township. A new report says Al-
lieds financial performance lags other specialty hospitals in the area.
Report: Two Allied Services facilities
only local specialty hospitals not
making more than average profits.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
C M Y K
PAGE 8B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Higher performance with better efciency.
Advanced safety with sportier handling.
Fresh styling with timeless quality.
Both a racy cockpit and reasonable price tag
that put driving fun within easy reach.
More than 2,000 improvements
Not a single compromise.
Daring New Design
Carefully Crafted Cabin
Persuasive New Power
Second-to-none Safety

2012 M-Class SUV


Starting at $48,990
Features:
302 Horsepower
7200 lbs. Towing Capacity (max)
All new 3.5L Direct Injection V-6
Delivers more torque over a wider range of RPM to
reduce emissions, fuel consumption and noise.
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Features:
ss Sedan
ng at $34,800
Higher perffffooooorrrrrmmmmaaaannnncccceeee witttthhhh bbbbetter eeeffcciiieennnccyyyyy.
AAdvanced safetyyyyy wwwwwiiiitttthhhhh sssssppppooooorrrrttttiiiieeeeerrrr hhhhaaaaaannnndddddddlllllllliiiiiiiiiinnnnnnnnnggggggggggggggg...
FFFrrrreeeesssshhhh ssssttttyyylllliiiinggg wwwwiiiitttthhhh ttttiiiimmmmeeeelllleeeessssssss qqquuuaaalllliiiiitttttyyyyyyy...
Bothh aa rrraaaaccccyyyy cccoooccckkppiitt and reasonabbbblllleeeeee pppppppprrrrriiiicceee ttttttaaaaaaagggggggg
that puuttt dddrrriiving fun within easy reachhh.
,000 improvements More than 2,,00 More than 2,
mpromise. com Not a single
sign Des Daring New D
ed Cabin afte Carefully Cra
w Power New Persuasive N
e Safety one Second-to-no
FFF
2012 M Cl
Starting at $48,9
Features:
302 Horsepower
7200 lbs. Towing Capaci ity (max)
All new 3.5L Direct In njection V-6
Delivers more torque over a a wider range of RPM to
reduce emissions, fuel cons sumption and noise.
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2011
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 57/47
Average 50/34
Record High 71 in 1989
Record Low 14 in 1986
Yesterday 13
Month to date 267
Year to date 752
Last year to date 810
Normal year to date 890
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was below 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday trace
Month to date 0.23
Normal month to date 1.46
Year to date 54.24
Normal year to date 33.35
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 3.33 -0.04 22.0
Towanda 2.05 -0.06 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 2.86 0.54 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 3.39 -0.06 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 58-63. Lows: 45-49. Mild with a
chance of showers. Showers likely
tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 61-68. Lows: 52-55. Mild with a
chance of showers. Showers likely
tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 56-60. Lows: 41-47. Partly cloudy
and mild. Mostly cloudy tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 65-66. Lows: 53-55. Mild with a
chance of showers. Showers becoming
likely tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 66-70. Lows: 54-60. Mild with a
chance of showers. Showers becoming
likely tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 24/10/.00 14/2/pc 12/-3/pc
Atlanta 77/54/.00 73/63/sh 71/41/t
Baltimore 74/56/.00 66/52/sh 61/42/r
Boston 68/54/.00 66/49/sh 58/43/r
Buffalo 65/57/.11 57/47/pc 48/33/pc
Charlotte 73/47/.00 73/59/c 74/44/t
Chicago 53/36/.01 60/37/pc 42/31/pc
Cleveland 68/57/.32 58/43/pc 47/34/sh
Dallas 81/69/.00 74/53/t 64/37/pc
Denver 56/28/.00 54/29/pc 48/33/s
Detroit 62/47/.34 55/38/pc 44/33/pc
Honolulu 86/69/.00 84/70/s 83/70/pc
Houston 82/68/.00 77/63/t 80/45/pc
Indianapolis 71/60/.21 58/39/c 47/31/s
Las Vegas 64/45/.00 67/48/s 66/46/s
Los Angeles 65/52/.00 64/53/s 68/52/s
Miami 83/73/.00 84/74/pc 84/72/pc
Milwaukee 51/36/.00 54/31/pc 42/29/pc
Minneapolis 52/35/.00 42/28/pc 36/22/c
Myrtle Beach 75/52/.00 76/65/pc 76/51/t
Nashville 77/64/.00 72/56/t 59/30/sh
New Orleans 83/60/.00 81/65/t 80/50/t
Norfolk 77/58/.00 74/59/c 75/52/t
Oklahoma City 69/58/.00 69/35/pc 55/32/s
Omaha 60/43/.00 48/25/pc 44/25/pc
Orlando 81/57/.00 85/69/pc 85/69/pc
Phoenix 72/54/.00 72/53/s 74/54/s
Pittsburgh 70/56/.28 59/45/sh 50/31/sh
Portland, Ore. 51/48/.07 49/43/sh 53/47/r
St. Louis 77/65/.00 64/39/c 50/36/pc
Salt Lake City 56/37/.00 46/30/c 48/35/pc
San Antonio 80/70/.00 79/53/t 79/46/pc
San Diego 65/54/.00 67/55/s 68/56/s
San Francisco 59/52/.00 63/47/s 61/47/s
Seattle 47/43/.00 47/37/sh 49/41/r
Tampa 83/63/.00 84/69/pc 83/67/pc
Tucson 68/45/.00 71/45/s 73/49/s
Washington, DC 73/54/.00 66/53/sh 63/42/t
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 46/34/.00 46/35/s 45/36/pc
Baghdad 126/41/.00 80/55/pc 78/52/pc
Beijing 52/27/.00 55/33/s 52/37/sh
Berlin 41/27/.00 41/30/s 41/28/s
Buenos Aires 79/57/.00 81/61/pc 83/61/s
Dublin 55/48/.00 54/46/pc 52/45/sh
Frankfurt 37/27/.00 44/27/s 44/25/s
Hong Kong 81/73/.00 81/72/pc 81/73/pc
Jerusalem 62/51/.50 64/46/pc 62/49/sh
London 50/46/.00 53/42/s 54/44/s
Mexico City 75/50/.00 77/49/pc 78/51/pc
Montreal 64/50/.00 53/36/pc 54/34/r
Moscow 34/30/.00 29/19/pc 27/20/pc
Paris 55/39/.00 53/39/s 53/40/s
Rio de Janeiro 79/73/.00 80/71/r 75/66/sh
Riyadh 86/55/.00 88/62/s 90/63/s
Rome 61/41/.00 61/45/pc 61/43/s
San Juan 86/76/.05 86/75/t 87/75/t
Tokyo 66/57/.00 58/45/sh 57/46/s
Warsaw 34/30/.00 39/27/c 37/25/pc
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
65/53
Reading
62/51
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
60/46
61/47
Harrisburg
63/45
Atlantic City
66/55
New York City
65/53
Syracuse
59/45
Pottsville
60/43
Albany
61/46
Binghamton
Towanda
60/45
61/42
State College
60/43
Poughkeepsie
63/46
74/53
60/37
54/29
69/43
42/28
64/53
64/51
63/30
36/22
47/37
65/53
55/38
73/63
84/74
77/63
84/70 29/26 14/2
66/53
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 6:51a 4:45p
Tomorrow 6:52a 4:44p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 8:51p 10:50a
Tomorrow 9:56p 11:27a
Last New First Full
Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 10
Again today,
spring is in the
air with temper-
atures well
above normal
and more typical
of a day in April.
Showers will
attend the pas-
sage of a weak
cold front today
followed by par-
tial clearing
tonight. But
since the front
will stall nearby,
lows tonight will
stay above 45
degrees and
more rain will
move in
Wednesday
morning. Then
much colder air
will arrive
Wednesday night
and Thursday,
but the weather
looks dry head-
ing into the com-
ing weekend
with plenty of
sunshine and
slightly warmer
temperatures.
Above normal
temperatures
return next
week, possibly
lasting into
Thanksgiving.
- TomClark
NATIONAL FORECAST: A storm system will trigger rain and thunderstorms from the Lower
Mississippi Valley into the Tennessee Valley and portions of the Southeast today. Some of these
storms may be strong to severe. Showers will also extend into the Ohio Valley and the Northeast,
while another storm system will bring rain and snow showers to the northern Great Lakes.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Heating Degree Days*
Precipitation
NATIONAL FORECAST
TODAY
Showers, fog, warm
WEDNESDAY
Morning
rain
54
49
FRIDAY
Mostly
sunny
48
28
SATURDAY
Mostly
sunny
53
30
SUNDAY
Partly
sunny,
shower
55
35
MONDAY
Mostly
cloudy,
rain late
50
40
THURSDAY
Mostly
cloudy,
colder
44
35
61

54

K
HEALTH S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011
timesleader.com
7
2
0
3
6
6
Show focuses on supplements
Join the discussion about fish
oil, vitamins and supplements at
7 tonight on the next live Call
the Doctor on WVIA-TV.
Moderator is George Thomas.
Panelists include: Dr. Frank A.
Bucci Jr., eye surgeon at Bucci
Laser Vision; Michael Kantar,
clinical dietitian with Geisinger
Health Systems; Barry Kaplan,
store owner of Everything Nat-
ural; Dr. Kevin H. Olsen, direc-
tor of cardiac catheterization
laboratory at Community Med-
ical Center, and via video Dr.
Julie T. Chen, medical director
of wellness clinics for several
Silicon Valley corporations.
Viewers may call in questions
during the show at (800) 326-
9842 or submit their questions
online at [http://wviatv.org/
live-show-comments]http://
wviatv.org/live-show-com-
ments.
An encore presentation can be
seen at 2 p.m. Nov. 20 on WVIA-
TV.
Smoking-cessation seminar
Marworth chemical depend-
ency counselor Michelle Kwiec,
LCSW, CAC, is hosting a free
smoking-cessation seminar at
5:30 p.m., Wednesday at Geis-
inger South Wilkes-Barre, 25
Church St., Wilkes-Barre, in the
Father Streit Conference Room.
Kwiecs presentation will
focus on both the mental and
physical aspects of nicotine
addiction and offer advice, tips
and strategies for those looking
to quit smoking.
Register for this free event by
calling (800) 275-6401 and say-
ing CareLink at the first
prompt, or register online at
www.geisinger.org/events.
Health lecture in Spanish
Dr. Juan Delgado, a Spanish-
speaking obstetrician and gyne-
cologist at Geisinger-Womens
Health Hazleton, will lecture in
Spanish on menopause at the
Hazleton Chamber of Com-
merce, 20 W. Broad St., Hazle-
ton. The event is free and open
to the public. To register, go
towww.geisinger.org/meno-
pauseevento.
Healthy cooking demo
Geisinger Wyoming Valley
Medical Centers cardiac reha-
bilitation experts will host a
healthy cooking demonstration
at 6 p.m. Dec. 8. The demon-
stration will take place in the
newly renovated cardiac rehab
demonstration kitchen at the
GWV outpatient specialty cen-
ter, 675 Baltimore Drive,
Wilkes-Barre.
At the demonstration, Geis-
inger cardiac rehabilitation
experts will cook up heart-
healthy holiday meals that those
in attendance will be able to
taste and bring home. An impor-
tant facet of maintaining a
strong, healthy heart is a diet
low in fat and cholesterol.
The cost for the demonstra-
tion is $20 and space is limited.
To register, call (800) 275-6401
and say CareLink, or vis-
itwww.geisinger.org/events.
HEALTH BRIEFS
Q: If a stroke is like a
heart attack in the
sense that theres a
blocked artery causing
the damage, why cant
doctors use stents to
open up blood vessels
in the brain to get
blood flowing again like they do for the
heart?
D.L., Linwood, N.J.
A: It turns out that stents are not a
good idea when it comes to the brain.
Use of a clot busting drug given within
a few hours of the onset of an stroke,
plus aspirin and drugs like Plavix after-
ward, seem to work much better than
trying to get a blocked brain artery
open with a stent.
The Stenting and Aggressive Medical
Management for Preventing Recurrent
Stroke in Intracranial Stenosis (SAMM-
PRIS) study of 451 stroke patients, just
published in the New England Journal of
Medicine, found that within just a month
after treatment, folks who received
stents died more often or had more
strokes (14.7 percent) than those treated
with medical therapy alone (5.8 per-
cent). Over less than a year of follow-up,
20.5 percent of the stented patients died
or had another stroke, compared with
11.5 percent of those who received med-
ical treatment alone. Medical therapy is
still the best option here.
Q: Id like to ask a creepy question,
Why does a body stiffen up after death
from rigor mortis?
A.L., Colorado Springs, Colo.
A: For centuries upon centuries, the
mystery of death and what lies beyond
has fascinated man. From a biological
point of view, death is a much simpler
concept. Its not an event, but a process.
This is because the various tissues and
organs in the living body die at different
rates.
Rigor mortis is due to a complex chem-
ical reaction. During life, our muscles
require energy (fuel). They need lots of
oxygen; however, during strenuous work
or exercise, this is in short supply. Heavy
muscle use causes a buildup of lactic acid.
It contributes to the feeling of muscle
fatigue and burn. Havent we all felt
that burn in our legs with climbing
stairs? During life, the lactic acid quickly
dissipates once we rest our muscles. In
death, this cannot happen. The break-
down of muscle fuel (glycogen) in death
leads to irreversibly high levels of lactic
acid. This leads to a complex reaction
where the components of muscle fibers
fuse together to form a gel. This gel is
what makes the body feel stiff in death.
Once the muscle is moved, the stiffness is
broken and the gel will not re-form.
The stiffness begins at once and be-
comes complete in 2-3 hours, developing
faster in the head, neck and arms than in
the legs.
ASK DR. H
M I T C H E L L H E C H T
Stents arent
best option for
stroke treatment
Dr. Mitchell Hecht is a physician specializ-
ing in internal medicine. Send questions to
him at: Ask Dr. H, P.O. Box 767787, Atlanta,
GA 30076. Due to the large volume of mail
received, personal replies are not possible.
A bushel of nutrients
Hold the fats often used with potatoes deep-frying oil,
full-fat sour cream, loads of butter and you get
a vegetable packed with nutrition.
One medium-size potato has ...
... and provides this
percentage of the minimum
daily requirement for
Calories 110
Total fat 0
Sodium 0
Vitamin C 45%
Potassium
B vitamins
thiamin, niacin
18%
Vitamin B6 10%
8%
Iron 6%
Source: Washington State Potato
Commission, MCT Photo Service
Graphic: Pat Carr 2011 MCT
The right stuff
Healthy Living
Johns Hopkins researchers
say they have uncovered the
path that breast cancer takes
to the lungs, information that
could lead to therapies to
block metastases responsible
for 90 percent of breast can-
cer deaths.
Metastasis transforms
breast cancer from a local,
curable disease, to one that is
systemic and lethal, said Dr.
Gregg L. Semenza, director
of the Vascular Program in
the Institute for Cell Engi-
neering, in a statement. Me-
tastasis was long thought a
late event in cancer progres-
sion, but we have now shown
metastasis to be an early
event that is dependent on
HIF-1.
The HIF-1 protein, which
Semenza and a team discov-
ered two decades ago, con-
trols the genes that enable
cells to survive in tumors
where there is low oxygen.
Other research has shown in-
creased HIF-1 activity results
Researchers are tracing
spread of breast cancer
By MEREDITH COHN
The Baltimore Sun
See CANCER, Page 2C
You can get the same healthy
proteins, carbohydrates and fats
for less money. The strategy is
to buy inexpensive foods that
still provide the nutrients that
support good health, says Dr.
Mickey Harpaz, a nutritionist and
exercise physiologist with offices
in New York and Connecticut.
Some tips:
Stop buying junk. Processed
entrees, snacks, soda and juices
often are expensive and do
nothing for your body.
Look beyond meat. Beans, lentils,
chickpeas and eggs are general-
ly cheap and rich in protein. If
you buy canned beans, rinse
them to cut down on salt.
Take advantage of chicken ...
Dollar for pound, its often a
bargain compared to other
meats. To save even more, buy
chicken whole and separate it
into parts for meals, soups and
sandwiches. Chicken liver also is
low-priced for the protein and
iron it provides.
... and canned fish. Tuna in water
(not oil) is a good alternative to
fresh fish; rinse before use.
Frozen seafood is often expen-
sive, but the fresh catch-of-the-
day may not be. Ask the seafood
department.
Go for frozen produce. Fruits and
vegetables are pricey out of
season, but frozen options tend
to be nutrient-rich thanks to
flash freezing done just after
picking. You also can load up on
cheap in-season produce, espe-
cially at farmers markets, and
freeze it.
Buy nuts in bulk. A handful a day
is an excellent protein source,
but small containers at grocery
stores are too costly. Get nuts
from wholesale stores and keep
them in air-tight containers.
HOW TO find nutritional bargains
Choose whole foods whenever
possible. Buy a full cabbage
and shred it yourself, for
example, rather than a
pre-packaged bag.
Shop smart. Write weekly
menus, follow grocery
lists and take advantage
of coupons, store brands
and bulk items. Dont shop
when youre hungry and
more likely to make im-
pulse buys.
MCT Information Services
Lets say its rush hour in Philadelphia and the roads and streets
are crowded with cars. Alex Doty has three or three and a half
miles between his home and his job, so whats the quickest way
for him to get from Point A to Point B? Pedal power. Riding
my bicycle to work is a part of the day I look forward to, Doty
said. I dont know a lot of people who say that about their com-
mutes. I feel that Im being very efficient because I get to
combine exercise time with the time Im commuting. Its time to
decompress. The other thing I love is that during rush hour, Im
Those who wish to use two wheels
instead of four to navigate Luzerne
County have plenty of options. Heres
a list of popular trails:
Back Mountain Trail, Luzerne:
Trailhead at top of Parry Street. Park
at Knights of Columbus Hall.
Back Mountain Trail, Trucksville:
Trailhead at Carverton Road and
Route 309. Park at Trucksville
Municipal Building.
Hazleton Rail Trail, Hazle
Township: Trailhead at state
routes 93 and 424.
Mocanaqua Loop Hiking
Trails, Shickshinny: Trailhead at Route
11 to across the Shickshinny Bridge
(Route 239).
Moon Lake County Park: Trailhead
on Route 29.
Susquehanna River Levee Trail:
Paved surface along the river with
historical signage. The trail has several
trailheads, including in Edwardsville,
adjacent to Kmart off Route 11, in King-
ston at the Kingston Recreation Center
on Third Avenue, off Route 11 by the
Midway Shopping Center in
Wyoming, at Willow Street Park
in South Wilkes-Barre and off
Delaney street in the Breslau
section of Hanover Township.
Source: www.tournepa.com
WHERE TO BIKE
IN LUZERNE COUNTY
By MARY THERESE BIEBEL mbiebel@timesleader.com
See BICYCLE, Page 2C
PETE G. WILCOX FILE PHOTO/THE TIMES LEADER
A cyclist on a mountain bike sets out
for a ride along the Wyoming Valley
Levee System.
C M Y K
PAGE 2C TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
H E A L T H
C A L L 714-6460 T O D AY!
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Providing 60 Years of Quality Eye Care To The Residents of NEPA.
FORTY FORT EYE ASSOCIATES
(HOME EYE CARE DIVISION)
1600 WYOMING AVE., FORTY FORT
288-1218
Dr. Jason Smith of Forty Fort Eye
Associates is providing the only house
call service for eye care in Northeast PA.
Dr. Smith tests for glaucoma, cataracts,
macular degeneration and will check your
eyeglass prescription.
This service is provided for those who are
homebound or in nursing homes. Medicare
covers the cost of the examination.
For further information, please call:
Dasa S. Satyam, M.D., ABIPP
468 Northampton Street
Edwardsville, Pa. 18704
KEYSTONE
PAIN CENTER LLC
Extensive Experience in Pain Management Techniques
Flouroscopy guided pain blocks
Intravenous sedation offered
Same day emergency appointments available
when scheduled by your family physician.
Most insurances accepted
For appointments call
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Claimants who are represented
by attorneys are three times more
likely to get benefts than claimants
without representation. The rules
are thousands of pages long,
complex and change frequently.
in lower survival rates in those
with breast cancer.
The findings are published in
the Sept. 12 issue of the Pro-
ceedings of the National Acade-
my of Science Early Edition
and in the August 22 issue of
Oncogene.
The researchers focused on
the lung to trace the role HIF-1
plays in breast cancer metasta-
sis.
They found the protein en-
abled breast cancer cells to pro-
duce enzymes that prepare the
lung for cancer to spread. They
also play a role in helping can-
cer cells travel to the lungs
through blood vessels.
Semenza and other research-
ers also found that a medica-
tion used to treat irregular
heartbeats can block HIF-1 pro-
duction and can stop liver and
prostate cancer cells from
growing. They studied whether
digitalis can do the same with
metastatic breast cancer b and
in mice, there were fewer and
smaller tumors in the lungs.
Clinical trials could be next.
CANCER
Continued from Page 1C
getting to work the fastest
way possible.
Doty, executive director of
the Bicycle Coalition of Grea-
ter Philadelphia, will give a
talk on Building a Bicycle
Culture in Our Community
at 7 tonight at the Genetti Ho-
tel and Conference Center in
Wilkes-Barre.
The downtown hotel al-
ready contributes to the local
bicycle culture by keeping a
fleet of 17 Bike Share bicy-
cles on hand to be loaned for
free to interested riders dur-
ing the warmer months.
From April to October, co-
ordinator Sam Wagner said,
the bikes were loaned out 220
times.
We had a lot of repeat vis-
itors, he said, explaining
long-term hotel guests used
them to explore the area and
local residents used them for
recreation and, in some cases,
even to travel to their jobs.
Theres no denying cycling
is good exercise and much
cheaper than buying gasoline
for a car. And the simple rem-
edy if you feel overly per-
spired afterward, Doty said, is
to carry an extra shirt.
So why dont more people
bring out their bikes?
Safety can be a worry, and
Doty admits, Ive had some
close calls.
But, he hastens to add, Ive
had close calls on my bike and
with motorists while Im
walking and with buses or
trolleys that Ive been on and
at times when Im driving
around in a car. The street is a
dangerous place to be. We
tend to severely underesti-
mate that danger when we get
into a car and to severely over-
estimate that danger when we
ride a bike.
The more people who cycle
and the more people who
walk, he said, the more aware
motorists will become of cy-
clists and walkers on the
streetscape. They will expect
them to be there and they will
be less likely to hit them.
Theres a hard-core group
of enthusiasts who will bike
no matter what, Doty said.
Theres a much larger group
of people who need facilities
that are more inviting. In
many places we can design or
revamp our streets to make
them more inviting.
This is where bikes and pe-
destrians belong, he said.
We all belong on our street-
scapes.
Tonight at Genettis Doty
will talk about the success in
Philadelphia, which has seen
the percentage of people who
bike to work grow by 151 per-
cent since 2000. The city also
has seen an increase in helmet
use and female ridership and
a decrease in sidewalk riding.
If you attend tonights
event, youll learn how to get
involved with Luzerne Coun-
ty Bikes, a local effort to make
streets safer for cyclists, pe-
destrians and motorists, said
spokeswoman Carol Hussa,
who recently rode a Bike
Share bike herself.
It had been 40 years since
her last endeavor, Hussa said.
Its true, what they say. You
never forget how. After that
initial feeling of Hey, Im on a
bike, youre all right.
Dotys presentation is spon-
sored by Around Town Bikes,
Live Well Luzerne County,
Wilkes-Barre Bike Share at
the Genetti Hotel and the
Wilkes-Barre Family YMCAs
ACHIEVE initiative. Trail or-
ganizations, Wilkes-Barre
Bike Share, BikeWB.org and
other groups will be on hand
with displays, information
and resources.
BICYCLE
Continued from Page 1C
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Alex Dotys daily 3
1
2-mile bike commute from West Philadelphia
to center city includes the new South Street Bridge bike lanes.
Doty will be in Wilkes-Barre tonight to speak on Building a Bicy-
cle Culture in Our Community.
Who: Alex Doty
What: Building a Bicycle Culture
in Our Community
When: 7 tonight
Where: Genetti Hotel and Confer-
ence Center, 77 E. Market St.,
Wilkes-Barre
Admission: Free
More info: 823-2191, ext. 140
IF YOU GO
AIMEE DILGER FILE PHOTO/THE TIMES LEADER
Sam Leavy Jr. and Mia Kratz
get a ride in a bicycle kiddie
carrier from their Aunt Terri
Emel along Third Street in
Kingston. Cycling advocates
want to make streetscapes
more inviting for cyclists and
pedestrians of all ages.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 3C

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Its not news that we should ex-
ercise. We know it, but we dont
do it. Its hard to get started and
harder still to keep at it. Its so
easy to come up with excuses.
But Harvard psychiatrist Dr.
John Ratey thinks he has the
nudge you need to get moving.
Its not six-pack abs or thinner
thighs. Its far more important
and fundamental: Exercise
keeps your brain from eroding,
he says.
Exercise is the one thing
weveprovenagainandagainthat
prevents the ravaging of aging on
our brain, and thats one thing
people are still afraid of.
Ratey is trying to spread the
word through lectures, books
(Spark: The Revolutionary New
Science of Exercise and the
Brain) and website (sparkin-
glife.org).
Other hazards of a sedentary
life obesity and Type 2 dia-
betes have lost the fear factor.
People arent afraid of diabetes.
People arent afraid of obesity.
They think well get pills, he
says, But they are (still) afraid of
losing their minds.
Ratey points out that a recent
Mayo Clinic review of more than
2,000 scientific papers concluded
that exercise is the one thing
youcandotoprevent the onset of
cognitive decline and Alzheim-
ers disease.
Andfor those whoreally detest
the idea of exercise, Ratey says,
This might be the clincher. ...
You get the most bang for your
buck if you havent been exercis-
ing. The biggest changes are seen
there.
By changes he means im-
proved intellectual capacity
along with what we call emotion-
al regulationif youre sour, you
get a little more happy; if youre
anxious, you get a little less
stressed and anxiety-driven.
And this is true of kids too, who
learn better and get higher test
scores if they exercise regularly.
The more intensity and time
spent, the bigger the payoff.
If you exercise three to six
months on a regular basis, your
brainactuallygrows, Rateysays.
By ELLEN WARREN
Chicago Tribune
Exercise can keep you
from losing your mind
LOS ANGELES If we are
what we eat, we also may be how
fast we eat. Two studies fromthe
University of Rhode Island offer
some insight into the relation-
ship between howfast we eat and
how much we eat.
The first study compared eat-
ing rates and calories consumed
among 30 men and 30 women at
various meals. Researchers dis-
covered that people who ate
quickly consumed about 3.1
ounces of foodper minute, versus
2.5 ounces per minute for medi-
um-speedeaters and2ounces per
minute for slow eaters.
For those who question wheth-
er men eat more than women,
wonder no more: At lunch, men
ate about 80 calories per minute,
while women ate about 52 calo-
ries per minute. At breakfast and
dinner, men still consumed more
calories per minute than women,
but the gap wasnt so wide. Still,
the researchers reported that
men who said they ate slowly ate
at about the same rate as women
who said they ate quickly.
The second study looked at
eating rates among men and
women while consuming differ-
ent types of food. Overall, liquid
meals were eaten more quickly
than solid meals, and men con-
sumed both liquid and solid
foods faster than women.
Researchers also discovered
that people with a higher body
mass index in general ate much
faster than those with a lower
BMI. Also, foods with whole
grains (whole grain cereal and
whole wheat toast) were eaten
more slowly than similar foods
made with refined grains.
Whole grains are more fi-
brous, so you have to chew them
more, which takes more time,
said co-author Kathleen Melan-
son, an associate professor of nu-
trition, in a news release.
Food for thought. The study
was presented recently at the an-
nual meeting of the Obesity So-
ciety in Orlando, Fla.
Men, heavy people may outpace
women, slim people in eating speed
By JEANNINE STEIN
Los Angeles Times
Michael Raymond, director of
Clinical/Forensic Neuropsychol-
ogy and clinical director of the
Brain Injury &
Sports Con-
cussion Pro-
gram at John
Heinz Rehabil-
itation in
Wilkes-Barre
Township, will
present a
workshop at
the National
Academy of
Neuropsychology meeting in
Marco Island, Fla., on Thursday.
The American Board of Profes-
sional Neuropsychology Prep-
aration for Application, Work
Sample Submission and Exam-
ination is a workshop for
preparation for board certifica-
tion in neuropsychology.
Dr. Peter R. Kowey, will lecture at
Community Medical Center,
Scranton, at noon Nov. 29 on
Linking Evidence-Based Care to
Improved Outcomes in Atrial
Fibrillation: Evolving Pharmac-
ologic Approaches. The event
will be held in CMCs Profes-
sional Building Auditorium on
Colfax Avenue and will be
broadcast via satellite to 1,400
VHA hospitals nationwide,
allowing
health care
professionals
across the
country the
opportunity to
ask questions
via web chat.
Kowey is chief of
the Division of
Cardiovascular Diseases at
Lankenau Hospital Main Line
Health System as well as presi-
dent of Main Line Health Heart
Center in Philadelphia. Dr.
Kowey is professor of Medicine
and Clinical Pharmacology at
Jefferson Medical College,
Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia. He has led in the
development of several anti-
arrhythmic drugs and anti-
tachycardia devices used to
treat life-threatening cardiac
rhythm problems.
Kowey earned his medical degree
at the University of Pennsylva-
nia School of Medicine and
completed a straight medicine
internship at the Milton S.
Hershey Medical Center of
Pennsylvania State University.
He performed his Internal
Medicine residency, followed by
fellowships in Cardiology at
Harvard University School of
Public Health and Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital; and Cardio-
vascular Medicine and Research
at West Roxbury VA Hospital
and Harvard Medical School.
Sponsored by the North American
Center for Continuing Medical
Education, VHA Inc., and Hori-
zon CME, the appearance is
supported by an independent
educational grant from Sanofi-
Aventis, Bristol-Myers Squibb
and Pfizer Inc. For more in-
formation or to register for the
event, call CMCs Continuing
Medical Education Department
at (570) 969-8197.
Dr. Seema Kumari, family practi-
tioner, recently joined Inter-
Mountain Medical Group and is
accepting new patients at her
office at 610
Wyoming Ave.,
Kingston.
Kumari earned
her medical
degree from
Nalanda
Medical Col-
lege, Patna,
India. She
performed
residency training at Jackson
General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
and Charleston Area Medical
Center, Charleston, W.Va. She
completed her residency in
family medicine at the Uni-
versity of Nebraska Medical
Center, Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Efrain Perez-Vargas, recently
joined Geisinger Health System
as director of the Movement
Disorders Program at the Neu-
rosciences Institute.
Dr. Perez comes to Geisinger from
Waukesha Memorial Hospital,
Waukesha, Wis., where he
served as medical director of
the neuroscience unit. He spe-
cializes in movement disorders,
such as tremor, Parkinsons
disease, and dystonia; selecting
patients for neurosurgical
interventions, such as deep
brain stimulation, in the treat-
ment of movement disorders;
gait disorders, which interfere
with a persons ability to walk
normally and easily; and motor
neurophysiology, the science of
understanding how cells of the
nervous system interact to
produce movement. He trained
with the prestigious movement
disorders center at Columbia
University.
Perez earned his medical degree
in 1986 from the University of
Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto
Rico. After completing a resi-
dency in family practice in 1988
at the Department of Family
Medicine, New York City, he
completed a residency in neu-
rology in 1992 at the University
of New York, Syracuse, N.Y. In
1994, Dr. Perez completed a
fellowship in movement dis-
orders at Columbia Presby-
terian Medical Centers Neur-
ological Institute, New York City.
HEALTH PEOPLE
Raymond
Kowey
Kumari
When you give blood,
you are doing one of
the most amazing
things anyone can
dream of saving a
life. Blood centers
nationwide traditionally
run into blood short-
ages at various times
throughout the year. In
our region alone, over
300 units of blood are
needed each day by
patients in area hospi-
tals.
On Tuesday, November
15, from 9:30 a.m.
5:00 p.m., Hazleton
General Hospital along
with Miller-Keystone
Blood Center, will host
a blood drive in the
Hazleton General Hos-
pital, Office & Educa-
tion Building. 700 East
Broad Street in Hazle-
ton. All individuals will
need to present a valid
Identification card.
Federal, State, County,
City, Municipality,
Workplace, or School
ID will be accepted.
Miller-Keystone Blood
Center is the only
supplier of blood prod-
ucts to Hazleton Gen-
eral Hospital.
Although you may never
know the recipient(s)
of your blood donation,
you can be assured
that they and their
families are extremely
grateful. To register,
please contact Janet
Witkowski at 501.6204.
BLOOD DRIVES
The complete health calendar
can be viewed at www.times-
leader. com by clicking the
Health link under the Features
tab. To have your health-ori-
ented event listed, send in-
formation to Health, Times
Leader, 15 N. Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA18711-0250; by fax:
829-5537; or e-mail
health@timesleader.com.
EDITORS NOTE
EXETER: The Cosmopolitan
Seniors will meet at 1p.m. today
at St. Anthony Center. Vic Mali-
nowski will preside. Host and
hostesses are Theresa Bekanich,
Frank Fountain, Bernie and
Gene Lavin and Marie Man-
tione. Joe Kleback presented a
Veterans Day display at the last
meeting and newmember Ro-
semary Golinski was announced.
Travel coordinator Johanna is
accepting reservations for a
Mount Airy Casino trip on Dec.
14. Non-members are invited.
For details call Johanna at 655-
2720.
FALLS: The Falls Senior
Center is holding a Thanks-
giving turkey dinner at noon on
Thursday. Alecture will be given
by Laura Sickler, a graduate
dietary student fromMarywood,
on the health benefits of typical
Thanksgiving foods. Aharvest
basket raffle will also take place.
Local herbalist Barbara Cun-
ninghamwill discuss herbs and
skin care at 11:30 a.m. on
Wednesday. Anyone wishing to
attend lunch for a suggested
donation of $2, should call Twila
at 388-2623 by12:30 p.m. the
day before the lunch.
JENKINSTWP.: The Jenkins
Township Senior Citizens group
will meet 6:30 tonight at the
Jenkins Township Fire House.
There will be refreshments and
bingo. President Jean Mudlock
will preside. Newmembers are
welcome.
KINGSTON: The Kingston
Senior Center, 680 Wyoming
Ave., is sponsoring a Mature
Driver presentation at 11a.m.
today. On Wednesday, repre-
sentatives fromKingston Com-
mons will do blood pressure
checks at 10:30 a.m. and stu-
dents fromFortis Institute will
hold a special question and
answer session at 11:30 a.m. The
Thanksgiving dinner will be
held on Thursday. Reservations
for lunch should be made a day
in advance and can be made by
calling 287-1102. A$2 donation
is requested for the meal. The
center is also collecting new
items for the Toys for Tots pro-
gram.
MOUNTAINTOP: The Moun-
tain Top Social Club will meet
3:10 p.m. Nov. 22 in the Father
Nolan Hall Day Roomat St. Jude
Church. The annual Christmas
party is scheduled for Dec. 13 at
the Chalet Restaurant, Mountain
Top. Sign up and payment due at
the next meeting. For more
information, call Otto at 474-
0641.
PITTSTON: Tobyhanna Army
Depot retirees will meet 8 a.m.
Wednesday at the Perkins Res-
taurant and Bakery, Route 315.
All retirees and current employ-
ees are welcome. For more in-
formation contact Bernie Petra-
sek at 287-9093 or 239-1682 or
bjpetra@juno.com.
PITTSTON: St. Josephs Se-
nior Social Club will meet 2 p.m.
Thursday in St. Roccos school
auditoriumon Oak Street. Bingo
and card games will be played
and refreshments will be served.
Hosts are Jean and Peter Pezzi-
no, Mary and Dominick Policare
and Lena Seman. AChristmas
party will be held Dec. 8 at Val-
entis Restaurant, Exeter. Final
reservations will be accepted.
For more information call There-
sa at 654-2967.
PLAINSTWP.: The Plains
Senior Citizens Project Head
will meet at 1p.m. Wednesday at
SS. Peter and Paul school cafete-
ria, Hudson Road. Members
should arrive at noon to enjoy a
Thanksgiving dinner. There will
be no hostesses for this meeting.
AChristmas party will be held
Dec. 18 at the Woodlands Inn
and Resort. Hostesses for the
Dec. 7 meeting will be Carolyn
Byrnes, Nanci Conlon, Jerry
Cookus, Louise Cookus, Sophia
Czahur and Marie Dominick.
PLAINSTWP.: The Tequila
Rose chapter of the Red Hat
Society will meet at 1p.m. today
in MommaBs Restaurant.
Members are asked to bring the
sweat shirts to be donated to the
boys and girls who attend Miner-
NEWS FOR SENIORS
See SENIORS, Page 4C
7
0
7
2
5
5
7
2
0
4
9
1
CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION WEEK
Saturday, Nov. 12th thru Friday, Nov. 18th.
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823-8272
Off Everything
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Hours Starting Fri. Nov. 11
Mon. thru Sat. 9am - 8pm Sunday 11am - 5pm
Coopers-Seafood.com
Join Santa, Mrs. Claus and the Elves at Coopers
for Christmas Carols, Gifts & Surprises!!
Cost: 10.95 per child ~ 12.95 per adult
Coopers On The Waterfront
Childrens Menu
~ Cheeseburger or hamburger with French fries and apple sauce
~ Grilled Cheese with French fries and apple sauce.
~ Chicken nuggets with French fries and apple sauce.
Adult Menu
~ Sauteed Chicken Strips - Two sauteed chicken strips topped with a wine and garlic
cream sauce. Served with French fries and cole slaw.
~ Crab Cake Sandwich and Soup - Homemade soup accompanied by Coopers own
Maryland Carb cake sandwich. Served with French fries and cole slaw
~ Petite Lobster Tails - Tender petite lobster tails lightly broiled and served with
drawn butter, French fries and cole slaw. $14.95
~ Broiled Stuffed Shrimp - Sweet gulf shrimp stuffed with crabmeat dressing and
served with French fries and cole slaw. $14.95
Reservations are required. Call Mary, Karen or Camille at 570-346-7049
Coopers Waterfront - 304 Kennedy Blvd. - Pittston, PA
http://www.coopers-seafood.com
C M Y K
PAGE 4C TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Photographs and information must
be received two full weeks before your
childs birthday.
To ensure accurate publication, your
information must be typed or comput-
er-generated. Include your childs
name, age and birthday, parents,
grandparents and great-grandparents
names and their towns of residence,
any siblings and their ages.
Dont forget to include a daytime
contact phone number.
We cannot return photos submitted
for publication in community news,
including birthday photos, occasions
photos and all publicity photos.
Please do not submit precious or
original professional photographs that
require return because such photos can
become damaged, or occasionally lost,
in the production process.
Send to: Times Leader Birthdays, 15
North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-
0250.
GUIDELINES
Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
If your childs photo and birthday
announcement is on this page, it will
automatically be entered into the
Happy Birthday Shopping Spree
drawing for a $50 certificate. One
winner will be announced on the first
of the month on this page.
WIN A $50 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Liam Jonathan Kane, son of
Jonathan and Joann Kane,
Hanover Township, is celebrating
his first birthday today, Nov. 15.
Liam is a grandson of Joseph
and Ilona Hart, Honey Pot, and
Robert and MaryAnn Kane,
Nuangola.
Liam J. Kane
Brandon Riley Longfoot, son of
Michael and Kimmy Longfoot,
Courtdale, celebrated his fourth
birthday Nov. 6. Brandon is a
grandson of David and Maureen
Longfoot, Kingston, and William
and Christine ODonnell,
Swoyersville. He is a great-
grandson of Theresa Riley,
Wilkes-Barre. Brandon has a
brother, David Michael, 5, and a
sister, Keleigh Adyriene, 9
months.
Brandon R. Longfoot
Skya Lyn Ropietski, daughter of
Dara and Joe Ropietski, Harveys
Lake, celebrated her fourth birth-
day Nov. 8. Skya is a granddaught-
er of Andrea Fallon and the late
George Fallon, Sugar Notch, and
Pat and Joe Ropietski, Wilkes-
Barre. She is a great-granddaught-
er of Jean and Henry Balakier,
Sugar Notch, and Anna Ropietski,
Wilkes-Barre. Skya has two broth-
ers, Eli, 6, and Cael, 5.
Skya L. Ropietski
Joshua Terrence Lord, son of
Melissa Koulik and Tyrone Lord,
both of Wilkes-Barre, is cele-
brating his sixth birthday today,
Nov. 15. Josh is a grandson of
Charles and Marie Koulik, Wilkes-
Barre, and Cheril Caesar, Brook-
lyn, N.Y. He is a great-grandson
of the late Geraldine Zaborny
and the late Anna Storzek.
Joshua T. Lord
Isabella Mia Sullivan, daughter of
Chad and Stefania Sullivan, West
Pittston, is celebrating her first
birthday today, Nov. 15. Isabella
is a granddaughter of Steve and
Mary Grace Steransky, Exeter,
and Samantha Sullivan, Hop
Bottom.
Isabella M. Sullivan
PETS OF THE WEEK
Name: Butterscotch
SPCA No: A09193382
Sex: Male
Age: 3
Breed/type: domestic, long-hair/
mix, orange/white
About this cat: long, smooth coat;
erect ears; long tail; neutered
Name: Stray
SPCA No: A14455831
Sex: Male
Age: unknown
Breed/type: terrier/mix, white/
solid
About this dog: long curly coat;
brown eyes; not neutered
How to adopt: Call or visitThe
SPCA of Luzerne County, 524
East Main St., Plains Township.
For more information call 825-
4111. Adoption hours are 11 a.m. to
3 p.m. and 5 to 7 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. Saturdays and Sundays.
Visit the SPCA of Luzerne Coun-
ty online at http://spcaluzerne-
county.org.
Visit the SPCA of Luzerne
County online at http://spcalu-
zernecounty.org
United Way of Wyoming Valleys partner agencies helped launch
the agencys annual fund drive at the Commission on Economic
Opportunity. Gene Brady, executive director, Commission on Eco-
nomic Opportunity; Michael Zimmerman, executive director, Family
Service Association; and Carmen Ambrosino, executive director,
Wyoming Valley Alcohol & Drug Services, are serving as the chairs
of the partner agencies campaign. Representatives, from left, are
Kandace Keefer, assistant director of community impact and cam-
paign; Ambrosino; Brady; Zimmerman; and Norene Bradshaw,
interim executive director, United Way of Wyoming Valley.
United Way agencies help launch campaign
al Springs Learning Center.
SWOYERSVILLE: The
Swoyersville Senior Citizens
will meet at 1p.m. Wednesday
at Holy Trinity Church, Hughes
Street. President Liz Zdancew-
icz will preside. Newmembers
are welcome.
TRUCKSVILLE: The Trucks-
ville United Methodist Church
is sponsoring an AARPDriver
Safety Class1-5 p.m. Wednes-
day and Thursday in the Educa-
tion Building across the street
fromthe church on Church
Road. The class is open to new
or returning students and will
focus on safe driving strategies
and ways to adapt to changes in
vision, hearing and physical
flexibility. No exams need to be
passed. Drivers 55 and over
who complete the course may
be eligible for a 5-percent reduc-
tion in their auto insurance
premiums during the next three
years. Spouses who both drive
the same vehicle should both
take the course.
Veterans and their spouses
may take the course for free.
Proof of active duty, reserve or
National Guard service must be
provided.
Cost is $14 ($12 for AARP
members) and a check made
payable to AARPshould be
brought to the first class along
with a pen or pencil and a cur-
rent drivers license.
To register call Linda at 696-
3424 and leave a message with a
name and phone number.
WILKES-BARRE: Rainbow
Seniors of Wilkes-Barre will
meet 1p.m. today at Albright
United Methodist Church, Dana
and Grove streets. Servers will
be the Rev. Dr. James Harring,
Doris Harring, Jerry Fiorucci
and Stella Fiorucci. Reserva-
tions for the Christmas party to
be held at Bentleys are due
today.
WILKES-BARRETWP.: The
RCANipper Club will meet 1
p.m. Wednesday at the Old
Country Buffet, East End Cen-
tre. AChristmas dinner will
take place Dec. 14 at the Golden
Palace. Cost is $10 to be paid at
the November meeting.
WYOMING: The Wyoming,
West Wyoming Seniors will
meet 1:30 p.m. today in the St.
Monica meeting room. Presi-
dent Frank Perfinski will pre-
side. Servers are Theresa Ken-
nedy, Olga Mizin and Joann
Kwasny. The Christmas dinner
will be held1p.m. Dec. 6 in the
St. Monica hall. To join the club,
call Angie Mastruzzo at 693-
1104.
SENIORS
Continued from Page 3C
The Hughestown Lions Club has presented the Melvin Jones Fel-
lowship Award.to Magisterial District Judge Fred A. Pierantoni. Pie-
rantoni has been a member of the club for more than 20 years and
has served in all elected club offices. The Melvin Jones Fellowship is
awarded to Lions Club members in recognition of their humanitarian
work. It is the organizations highest honor. Since 1995, Pierantoni
has been a cabinet member of Lions Club District 14-W, appointed by
each Lion governor, and has held positions including parliamentarian
and peace poster chair. Lions Club International has previously
awarded Pierantoni with the Pennsylvania Counselors Distinguished
Service Award and International Leadership Medal. Lions Clubs In-
ternational was founded in 1917 by Melvin Jones, a Chicago busi-
nessman who believed in community service. For more information
on Lions Clubs International, visit www.lionsclubs.org. From left are
Frank Tierney, director, Steve Golya, president, and Pierantoni.
Pierantoni receives highest award from Lions Club
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 5C
D I V E R S I O N S
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
GOREN BRIDGE
B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: I have
been battling breast
cancer and have been
blessed to have a
lot of support from
family, friends and
some awesome medi-
cal providers. My
husbands best friend and his wife
socialize with us quite often, and
the friendship is important to him.
I recently celebrated a birthday and
these friends had us over for a belated
birthday dinner. They bought me
beautiful flowers and a gift. The card
attached made a joke about my ag-
ing breasts, which she found quite
funny.
Abby, I had a mastectomy, which
she knew about! To make matters
worse, my hair has just started to
grow back from the chemo, so I de-
cided to have some highlights put in,
and she told me she didnt like my
new hair.
I am hurt and dumbfounded by her
insensitive behavior. Unfortunately,
this isnt the first time she has said
things like this. How do I tell her Im
offended by her rudeness without
compromising my husbands friend-
ship with them?
Harried Friend
Dear Harried Friend: You nailed it.
The woman is insensitive but you
said she has also made tasteless com-
ments in the past. For the sake of
the friendship between your hus-
bands, tune her out and spend less
time with her one-on-one. Its OK
to tell her that her joke about your
aging breasts hurt your feelings
in light of your mastectomy, and
that as your hair is growing back
you thought youd like to try some-
thing different. However, if you
use the word offended shell prob-
ably become defensive, so avoid
that word.
A final thought: Most people are
terrified of cancer. People sometimes
try to make jokes about things that
make them uncomfortable in an effort
to diffuse those feelings. This may be
the reason the woman tried to joke
about it, so dont let it cause you to
carry a grudge.
Dear Abby: I have recently recon-
ciled with my girlfriend of six years,
Molly. It has been five months since
our last fallout and longest breakup.
While we were apart, a woman I
knew through my business made it
clear that she was interested in me.
One thing led to another and Tish
and I slept together. Now shes
pregnant.
Im happy to be back with Molly
now, but have been contacted re-
cently by Tish with proof of the
pregnancy. Im afraid Molly will leave
me if she knows about it. Shes the
woman of my dreams and the one I
want to spend the rest of my life with.
Help, please.
Its Complicated in California
Dear Its Complicated: Ill try. Talk
to Molly about this and consult an at-
torney. Molly should not hold against
you something that happened while
you were separated. Whether the
child is yours can be determined by a
paternity test. If it is yours, you will
be responsible for providing child
support until he or she is an adult
and emotional support well beyond. If
Molly is, indeed, the woman of your
dreams, shell stand beside you. If
not, you are better off without her.
And in the future, please use birth
control.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Cancer patient is stunned by womans tasteless joke at her expense
To receive a collection of Abbys most
memorable and most frequently re-
quested poems and essays, send a busi-
ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O. Box
447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage
is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You
dont always feel its necessary
to reveal your true self; some-
times that ruins the game. And
so youll carefully control your
image, taking notice of what
people want to perceive in you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Dont
hesitate to dive in and deal with
the mornings knotty little prob-
lem. Once its handled, youll be
more sociable, talkative and gen-
erally fun to be around.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You may
start out a bit ungrounded. This
is a signal that its time to take
back your experience, personal-
ize your life and make things
your own.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). People
will wonder what youre really
thinking, though youre not quite
ready to let down your guard.
Let them stew in the mystery of
you for a while.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Theres
someone in your life who seems
to make a hobby of telling you
what to do. This person isnt
your boss, technically, but may
as well be by the looks of every-
thing youve been doing for him
or her lately.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Stay
productive even when your work
doesnt seem all that compelling.
Stick with it. If you can avoid get-
ting distracted, or at least limit
your distractions considerably,
youll have a breakthrough.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Youll be
inclined to take a straightforward
approach with others, declar-
ing, This is me. Take me how I
am, or dont. This method will
be most effective in preventing
wasted time and energy.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Youll
relate to the legendary tortoise,
as there will be a hare-like char-
acter in todays story: so eager
to get ahead, and yet without
the stamina to follow through to
the end.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Theres a wall around you that
youre hardly even aware of. Its
self-constructed to keep out the
dangerous people who can waste
your time or hurt your feelings.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Youll be inspired to break out
of a rut. Heres how: Instead of
sighing, sing. Instead of roll-
ing your eyes, clap your hands
enthusiastically.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Different is good, especially
when its not so different that
no one understands. If you
can stand out from the crowd
when it matters, but relate to
everyone in the crowd just the
same, your originality will be
celebrated.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Youre
glad that people feel comfort-
able around you, but when they
behave in an inconsiderate man-
ner, you may wonder if youre
too open, kindhearted and for-
giving for your own good.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (Nov. 15).
Political success and spiritual
fulfillment will be yours in 2012.
The efforts you make to change
the way you present yourself to
the world will be most effective,
and youll create the impression
you desire. Authority figures
teach you in January. Aquarius
and Sagittarius people adore
you. Your lucky numbers are: 19,
40, 32, 15 and 7.
C M Y K
PAGE 6C TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
T E L E V I S I O N
You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.
Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm
NO PASSES
IMMORTALS
IMMORTALS (XD-3D) (R)
1:55PM, 4:40PM, 7:25PM, 10:20PM
A VERY HAROLD & KUMAR CHRISTMAS
(3D) (R)
12:25PM, 1:45PM, 2:40PM, 4:15PM, 4:55PM,
6:35PM, 7:10PM, 8:50PM, 9:25PM
A VERY HAROLD & KUMAR CHRISTMAS
(DIGITAL) (R)
1:10PM, 3:25PM, 5:40PM, 7:55PM, 10:10PM
ANONYMOUS (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:15PM, 7:05PM
FOOTLOOSE (2011) (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
3:00PM, 8:45PM
IMMORTALS (3D) (R)
1:00PM, 3:40PM, 6:30PM, 9:15PM
IMMORTALS (DIGITAL) (R)
12:20PM, 2:55PM, 5:35PM, 8:20PM
IN TIME (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
2:10PM, 4:50PM, 7:30PM, 10:30PM
J. EDGAR (DIGITAL) (R)
12:55PM, 2:25PM, 4:00PM, 5:45PM, 7:20PM,
8:55PM, 10:25PM
JACK AND JILL (DIGITAL) (R)
12:40PM, 1:50PM, 3:05PM, 4:05PM, 5:20PM,
6:25PM, 7:40PM, 8:40PM, 9:55PM
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 3 (DIGITAL) (R)
12:15PM, 2:45PM, 5:15PM, 7:45PM, 10:25PM
PUSS IN BOOTS (3D) (PG)
12:50PM, 2:00PM, 3:10PM, 4:25PM, 5:30PM,
6:40PM, 7:50PM, 9:00PM, 10:15PM
PUSS IN BOOTS (DIGITAL) (PG)
12:10PM, 1:25PM, 2:30PM, 3:45PM, 5:00PM,
6:05PM, 7:15PM, 8:25PM, 9:35PM
REAL STEEL (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:00PM, 5:50PM
RUM DIARY, THE (DIGITAL) (R)
4:10PM, 10:00PM
TOWER HEIST (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:05PM, 1:20PM, 2:35PM, 3:50PM, 5:05PM,
6:20PM, 7:35PM, 9:05PM, 10:05PM
Dont just watch a movie, experience it!
All Stadium Seating and Dolby Surround Sound
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***$2.50 Additional Charge for 3D Attractions.***
No passes, rain checks, discount tickets accepted to these features
D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge
(Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees)
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ALL FEATURES NOW PRESENTED IN DIGITAL FORMAT
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EXPERIENCE D/BOX MOTION ENHANCED
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SPECIAL EVENTS
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 - PG13 - 130 min.
Thursday, November 17
th
at 12:00 midnight
The Twilight Saga: Eclipse - PG13 - 145 min.
Showing Tuesday, November 15
th
at 7:30pm only
*Immortals - R - 120 min.
(12:45), (3:15), 7:00, 9:30
***Immortals in 3D - R - 120 min.
(1:20), (4:15), 7:20, 10:15
Immortals in 3D D-Box - R - 120 min.
(1:20), (4:15), 7:20, 10:15
*J. Edgar - R - 150 min.
(12:30), (3:30), 7:00, 10:00
**Jack and Jill - PG - 100 min.
(12:50), (1:10), (3:00), (3:40), 7:00, 7:40,
9:10, 9:50
Tower Heist - PG13 - 115 min.
(12:40), (1:10), (3:10), (3:45), 7:10, 7:20, 9:40,
10:10
***A Very Harold &Kumar
3D Christmas - R - 100 min.
(1:40), (3:50), 7:40, 9:55
In Time - PG13 - 120 min.
(12:50), (3:20), 7:30, 10:00
***Puss in Boots in 3D - PG - 100 min.
(1:15), (3:30), 7:15, 9:25
Puss in Boots - PG - 100 min.
(1:45), (4:00), 7:30, 9:40
The RumDiary - R - 135 min.
(12:30), 7:10, 10:10 (No 7:10 or 10:00 show on
Tues., Nov. 15th)
Paranormal Activity 3 - R - 95 min.
(1:25), (3:30), 7:25, 9:30
Footloose - PG13 - 125 min.
(1:20), (4:00), 7:20, 9:55
Real Steel - PG13 - 140 min.
(3:15)
7
1
6
6
2
4
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CURRYS
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99
Wyoming Valley Chapter
The Craft Show features over 100 vendors exhibiting a variety of handcrafted items.
Catering by Pierce Street Deli
For additional information call (570) 823-7161 ext. 348
Proceeds Beneft American Red Cross Services in theWyomingValley
Santa will be visiting
Sat., Nov. 26 & Sun., Nov. 27
10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
FREE PARKING
General Admission $4
Children 12 and under FREE
Sponsored by
The Family of
Betty Colonna
18
th
Annual
Holiday Craft Show
Kingston Armory
280 Market St., Kingston
Sat. 11/26
9am - 4pm
Sun. 11/27
10am - 4pm
UGLY TUB!
HARD TO CLEAN?
WHY REMOVE, IMPROVE
THE BATHTUB WIZARD
208-9800
CALL ANYTIME FOR
YOUR FREE ESTIMATE
Crack & Chip Repair
Repairing Acrylic & Fiberglass
Countertops: 72 Stone Finishes Available
5 Yr. Warranty - No Removal, No Mess
Senior Discounts - Serving 22 yrs. Fully Insured
Let me Casta Spell
On Those Tub Blues!
158 Memorial Hwy.
Shavertown
1.800.49.SHOES
Dear Santa,
All I want
for
Christmas
is a new
pair of
UGGs
Daily grid contains updated information (PA) Parental advisory (N) New programming MOVIES
6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
0
News World
News
Newswatc
h 16
Inside Edi-
tion
Last Man
Standing
Man Up!
(TVPG)
Dancing With the
Stars (N) (TVPG)
(:01) Body of Proof
(N) (CC) (TVPG)
News (:35)
Nightline

Leave-
Beaver
Leave-
Beaver
Good
Times
Good
Times
Maude
(TVPG)
Maude
(TVPG)
All in the
Family
All in the
Family
Newswatc
h 16
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Sanford &
Son
Sanford &
Son
6
Judge
Judy
Evening
News
The Insid-
er (N)
Entertain-
ment
NCIS Engaged, Part
2 (N) (TV14)
NCIS: Los Angeles
Betrayal (TV14)
Unforgettable (N)
(CC) (TV14)
Access
Hollywd
Letterman
<
News Nightly
News
Wheel of
Fortune
Jeopardy!
(N)
The Biggest Loser The players compete in a
pentathlon. (N) (CC) (TVPG)
Parenthood Sore
Loser (N) (TVPG)
News at 11 Jay Leno
F
30 Rock
(TV14)
Family
Guy (CC)
Simpsons Family
Guy (CC)
90210 A Thousand
Words (N) (TV14)
Ringer Henry bonds
with Olivia. (TV14)
Excused
(TV14)
TMZ (N)
(TVPG)
Extra (N)
(TVPG)
Always
Sunny
L
PBS NewsHour (N)
(CC)
Call the Doctor (TVG) Secrets of the Dead
(TVPG)
Nazi Hunt: Elusive Justice Identifying Nazi
fugitives. (PA) (CC) (TV14)
Nightly
Business
Charlie
Rose (N)
U
The Peoples Court
(N) (CC) (TVPG)
The Doctors (N) (CC)
(TVPG)
Cold Case Late Re-
turns (TVPG)
Cold Case (CC)
(TVPG)
True Hollywood Story
(CC) (TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
Old Chris-
tine
X
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Glee Mash-Off (N)
(CC) (TV14)
New Girl
(TV14)
Raising
Hope (N)
News First
Ten
News
10:30
Love-Ray-
mond
How I Met

Criminal Minds (CC)


(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Flashpoint The Bet-
ter Man (TV14)
Flashpoint Id Do
Anything (TV14)
#
News Evening
News
Entertain-
ment
The Insid-
er (N)
NCIS Engaged, Part
2 (N) (TV14)
NCIS: Los Angeles
Betrayal (TV14)
Unforgettable (N)
(CC) (TV14)
News Letterman
)
King of
Queens
King of
Queens
How I Met How I Met Cold Case Late Re-
turns (TVPG)
Cold Case (CC)
(TVPG)
The 10
News
The Office
(CC)
Excused
(TV14)
The Office
(CC)
+
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
90210 A Thousand
Words (N) (TV14)
Ringer Henry bonds
with Olivia. (TV14)
PIX News at Ten Jodi
Applegate. (N)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
1
30 Rock
(TV14)
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Big Bang
Theory
Cold Case Late Re-
turns (TVPG)
Cold Case (CC)
(TVPG)
Phl17
News
Friends
(TV14)
Big Bang
Theory
30 Rock
(TV14)
AMC
Master and Commander: The Far Side of
the World (5:00) (PG-13, 03)
Jurassic Park (PG-13, 93) Sam Neill. Cloned dinosaurs run
amok at an island-jungle theme park. (CC)
Jurassic Park III
(PG-13, 01)
AP
River Monsters: Un-
hooked (TVPG)
I, Predator Killer
Whale (TVPG)
The Blue Planet: Seas
of Life (TVG)
Planet Earth Pole to
Pole (CC) (TVG)
Planet Earth Ice
Worlds (CC) (TVG)
The Blue Planet: Seas
of Life (TVG)
ARTS
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars (N)
Storage
Wars (N)
Storage
Wars
Storage
Wars
CNBC
Mad Money (N) The Kudlow Report
(N)
BMW: A Driving Ob-
session
Liquid Assets: The Big
Business of
American Greed
Troy A. Titus
Mad Money
CNN
John King, USA (N) Erin Burnett OutFront
(N)
Anderson Cooper 360
(N) (CC)
Piers Morgan Tonight
(N)
Anderson Cooper 360
(CC)
Erin Burnett OutFront
COM
Daily
Show
Colbert
Report
30 Rock
(TV14)
30 Rock
(TV14)
Worka-
holics
Tosh.0
(TV14)
Tosh.0
(TV14)
Tosh.0
(TV14)
Tosh.0
(TV14)
Worka-
holics
Daily
Show
Colbert
Report
CS
Sport-
sNite
Eagles Ex-
tra
Tennis Champions Series: Washington DC.
Courier vs. Chang. (Taped)
DNL Primetime SportsNite (CC) After-Jay
Glazer
net IM-
PACT
CTV
Choices
We Face
Its a Mira-
cle
Daily Mass The Holy
Rosary
CTV Special Presen-
tation
Focus (TVG) Threshold of Hope
(TVG)
Fulton
Sheen
Women of
Grace
DSC
Cash Cab
(CC)
Cash Cab
(CC)
Dirty Jobs Stand-in
fugitive. (TVPG)
Auction
Kings
Auction
Kings
Auction Kings: Top 10
Odd Items (CC)
American Guns (CC)
(TV14)
Auction Kings: Top 10
Odd Items (CC)
DSY
Good Luck
Charlie
Good Luck
Charlie
Wizards-
Place
A.N.T.
Farm
(TVG)
Shake It
Up! (CC)
(TVG)
Bolt (PG, 08) Voices of
John Travolta, Miley Cyrus, Susie
Essman. (CC)
Good Luck
Charlie
(:35)
Shake It
Up! (CC)
Shake It
Up! (CC)
(TVG)
Good Luck
Charlie
E!
Khloe &
Lamar
Khloe &
Lamar
E! News (N) Sex and
the City
Sex and
the City
Dirty Soap (TV14) The E! True Holly-
wood Story (TV14)
Chelsea
Lately
E! News
ESPN
College GameDay (N)
(Live) (CC)
College Basketball State Farm Champions
Classic -- Duke vs. Michigan State.
College Basketball State Farm Champions Classic --
Kansas vs. Kentucky. From New York. (N) (Live)
Sports-
Center
ESPN2
Womens College Basketball State Farm Tip-
Off Classic -- Miami at Tennessee.
College Basketball Florida at Ohio State. (N)
(Live)
College Basketball CBE Classic -- Austin Peay
State at California. (N) (Live)
FAM
Matilda (PG, 96) Mara Wilson, Danny
DeVito, Rhea Perlman.
Annie (PG, 82) Aileen Quinn, Albert Finney. Daddy Warbucks
protects little orphan Annie in 1930s New York.
The 700 Club (N) (CC)
(TVG)
FOOD
Chopped One in a
Hundred
Cupcake Wars Cupcake Wars Chopped Turbot
Power
Chopped Give It
Your All (N)
Chopped Oysters
cause problems.
FNC
Special Report With
Bret Baier (N)
FOX Report With
Shepard Smith
The OReilly Factor
(N) (CC)
Hannity (N) On Record, Greta Van
Susteren
The OReilly Factor
(CC)
HALL
Debbie Macombers Call Me Mrs. Miracle
(10) Doris Roberts. (CC)
The Town Christmas Forgot (10) Lauren
Holly, Rick Roberts. (CC)
Battle of the Bulbs (10) Daniel Stern, Matt
Frewer. (CC)
HIST
Third Reich The Fall The downfall of the
Third Reich. (Part 2 of 2) (CC)
Brad Meltzers Decod-
ed (CC) (TVPG)
Engineering Evil The evolution of the Holo-
caust. (N) (CC) (TVPG)
MysteryQuest (CC)
(TVPG)
H&G
Property
Virgins
Property
Virgins
Hunters
Intl
House
Hunters
My First
Place (N)
My House My House Property
Virgins
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
Hunters
Intl
Property
Virgins
LIF
Unsolved Mysteries
(CC) (TV14)
Unsolved Mysteries
(CC) (TV14)
Unsolved Mysteries
(CC) (TV14)
Seduced by Lies (10) Josie Davis, Marc
Menard. Premiere. (CC)
Unsolved Mysteries
(CC) (TV14)
MTV
That 70s
Show
That 70s
Show
Friend-
zone (N)
Friend-
zone
True Life I Used to Be Fat
Sammy (TVPG)
I Used to Be Fat
Maddy (TVPG)
Chelsea
Settles
Chelsea
Settles
NICK
Sponge-
Bob
Sponge-
Bob
Brain-
Surge
Sponge-
Bob
Sponge-
Bob
Kung Fu
Panda
That 70s
Show
That 70s
Show
George
Lopez
George
Lopez
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
OVAT
Gullivers Travels (PG, 96) Ted Dan-
son, Mary Steenburgen. (Part 1 of 2)
Gullivers Travels (PG, 96) Ted Dan-
son, Mary Steenburgen. (Part 2 of 2)
Gullivers Travels (PG, 96) Ted Dan-
son, Mary Steenburgen. (Part 2 of 2)
SPD
NASCAR Race Hub
(N)
Pass Time Pass Time Stunt-
busters
Stunt-
busters
Dumbest
Stuff
Dumbest
Stuff
Wrecked
(TVPG)
Wrecked
(TVPG)
Stunt-
busters
Stunt-
busters
SPIKE
Auction
Hunters
Auction
Hunters
Auction
Hunters
Auction
Hunters
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Hunters
Auction
Hunters
Auction
Hunters
Auction
Hunters
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Hunters
Flip Men Mystery
House (N) (TVPG)
Auction
Hunters
SYFY
Category 6: Day of
Destruction (5:00)
Zombie Apocalypse Resident Evil: Apocalypse (R, 04) Milla
Jovovich, Sienna Guillory. (CC)
Return-Dead: Rave
TBS
King of
Queens
King of
Queens
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Conan (N)
TCM
The Story of Will Rogers (52) Will
Rogers Jr., Jane Wyman.
AFI Master Class (N) Saving Private Ryan (R, 98) Tom Hanks. U.S. troops look
for a missing comrade during World War II. (CC)
TLC
Toddlers & Tiaras
(CC) (TVPG)
Cake Boss Cake Boss Extreme
Coupon
Extreme
Coupon
19 Kids and Counting
(CC) (TVG)
Quints-
Surprise
Quints-
Surprise
Extreme
Coupon
Extreme
Coupon
TNT
Bones (CC) (TV14) Bones (CC) (TV14) Bones (CC) (TV14) The Negotiator (R, 98) Samuel L. Jackson. A top police ne-
gotiator is accused of committing murder. (CC)
TOON
World of
Gumball
Johnny
Test
Johnny
Test
Looney
Tunes
Looney
Tunes
World of
Gumball
King of
the Hill
King of
the Hill
American
Dad
American
Dad
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
TRVL
Bizarre Foods With
Andrew Zimmern
Bizarre Foods With
Andrew Zimmern
Made in
America
Made in
America
Mysteries at the Mu-
seum (N) (TVPG)
Mysteries at the Mu-
seum (TVPG)
Extreme Superstruc-
tures (TVG)
TVLD
(:11) M*A*S*H Offi-
cers Only (TVPG)
(6:49)
M*A*S*H
(:22)
M*A*S*H
Roseanne Roseanne Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
King of
Queens
King of
Queens
USA
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Covert Affairs (N)
(CC) (TVPG)
Psych Dead Mans
Curveball (TVPG)
VH-1
Excused
(TVPG)
Excused
(TV14)
Basketball Wives LA
(TV14)
Love & Hip Hop
(TV14)
Tough Love: The
Wards Get Real
Why Am I Still Single?
(TVPG)
Basketball Wives LA
(TV14)
WE
Charmed Muse to
My Ears (TVPG)
Charmed (CC) (TVPG) Joan & Melissa: Joan
Knows Best?
Joan & Melissa: Joan
Knows Best?
Golden
Girls
Golden
Girls
Golden
Girls
Golden
Girls
WGN-A
30 Rock
(TV14)
30 Rock
(TV14)
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine
(N) (CC)
30 Rock
(TV14)
Scrubs
(TV14)
WYLN
Rehabili-
tation
Lets Talk WYLN Re-
port
Topic A Tarone
Show
Paid Prog. WYLN
Kitchen
Storm Pol-
itics
Late Edition Classified Beaten
Path
YOUTO
(5:45) The X-Files Ir-
resistible (TV14)
Adrenali-
na
Diggna-
tion on
Revision3 Variety
Hour
The X-Files Irre-
sistible (TV14)
(:15) The Green Hor-
net (TVPG)
Batman Hot Off the
Griddle (TVPG)
PREMIUM CHANNELS
HBO
What a Girl Wants (6:15) (PG, 03) Aman-
da Bynes. A plucky teenager goes to London
to meet her father. (CC)
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of
the Dawn Treader (PG, 10) Georgie Hen-
ley, Skandar Keynes. (CC)
24/7 Pac-
quiao
Enlight-
ened
(TVMA)
Bored to
Death
(TVMA)
Boardwalk
Empire
(CC)
HBO2
Sing Your Song
(5:30) (11) (CC)
Too Big to Fail (7:15) (11) William Hurt.
Financial leaders try to repair a faltering U.S.
economy in 2008. (CC)
Make-
America
Hung (CC)
(TVMA)
Real Time With Bill
Maher (CC) (TVMA)
Enlight-
ened
(TVMA)
Harry
Potter
MAX
Face/Off
(4:00)

The Losers (6:20) (PG-13, 10)


Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Zoe
Saldana. (CC)
The Getaway (R, 94) Alec Baldwin, Kim
Basinger. Husband-and-wife thieves flee af-
ter a gangsters betrayal. (CC)
Dinner for Schmucks (PG-13, 10) Steve
Carell. Comic misadventures follow a mans
encounter with a buffoon.
MMAX
Grind
(5:00)
(CC)
Sugar Hill (6:45) (R, 93) Wesley Snipes, Michael
Wright, Theresa Randle. One of two brothers wants out
of the illegal drug business. (CC)
Life as We Know It (PG-13, 10) Kather-
ine Heigl. Antagonists must work together to
raise their goddaughter. (CC)
Co-Ed Confidential
Breaking Up (CC)
(TVMA)
SHO
Twil:
Eclipse
The Myth of the American
Sleepover (10) Jade Ram-
sey. iTV Premiere.
Sympathy for Delicious (8:15) (R, 10) Orlan-
do Bloom, Juliette Lewis. iTV. A paralyzed DJ
tries faith healing.
Dexter Nebraska
Dexter takes a trip to
Nebraska. (CC)
Homeland Mike and
Jessica face the fall-
out. (TVMA)
STARZ
Salt (5:20) (PG-13,
10) (CC)
Country Strong (PG-13, 10) Gwyneth
Paltrow, Tim McGraw. (CC)
Battle: Los Angeles (PG-13, 11) Aaron
Eckhart, Michelle Rodriguez. (CC)
The Other Guys (PG-
13, 10)
TMC
King of
California
(4:45)
The Joneses (6:20) (R, 09)
David Duchovny, Demi Moore,
Amber Heard. (CC)
Glorious 39 (R, 09) Romola Garai, Bill
Nighy. Premiere. A mystery surrounds a
British family on the eve of WWII. (CC)
The Messenger (10:10) (R, 09) Ben
Foster. A soldier gets involved with a fallen
comrades widow. (CC)
6 a.m. 22 The Daily Buzz (TVG)
6 a.m. CNN American Morning (N)
6 a.m. FNC FOX and Friends (N)
7 a.m. 3, 22 The Early Show (N)
7 a.m. 16 Good Morning America
Author Regis Philbin; author
Shaquille ONeal; former NASA
astronaut Mark Kelly; chef Mi-
chael Symon. (N)
7 a.m. 28 Today Parade floats;
raising teens; Jamie Oliver;
Biggest Loser update; Elijah
Wood; fashion. (N)
8 a.m. 56 Better Holiday gifts;
Caterina Scorsone; peanut-
butter cake-bites. (N) (TVPG)
T V TA L K
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 1D
CALL TO PLACE 24/7
570.829.7130
800.273.7130
SEARCH: TIMESLEADER.COM/CLASSIFIED
EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@TIMESLEADER.COM
MARKETPLACE
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices 150 Special Notices
250 General Auction 250 General Auction
November 13, 2011
Public Notice
Notice is hereby given that the Luzerne County Emer-
gency Planning Committee (LEPC) will hold a public meeting on
Tuesday, December 13, 2011 at 4: 00 p.m. in the Luzerne Coun-
ty Emergency Management Agency Building located at 185
Water St., Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania for the following purpos-
es:
Present the following SARA facility emergency
plans for approval and acceptance:
Facility Location
Home Depot Pittston Twp, PA
Bemis West Hazleton, PA
ADM Hazle Twp., PA
Following presentation for formal review, copies of the
above listed plans will be available for review by interested par-
ties at the Luzerne County Emergency Management Agency, 185
Water St., Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Monday through Friday
from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Additional information on facilities that are required to
prepare emergency plans under SARA Title III may be obtained
by contacting the Luzerne County Emergency Management
Agency at (570) 820-4400 or 1-800-821-3715.
The County of Luzerne does not discriminate on the
basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, disability or
familial status in employment or the provision of services.
The Luzerne County Emergency Management Agency
Building is a facility accessible to persons with disabilities. If spe-
cial accommodations are required, please notify the Luzerne
County Commissioners by calling (570) 825-1500 or TDD (570)
825-1860.
Stephen Bekanich
Coordinator
Emergency Management Agency
Octagon Family
Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
Wednesday Nov. 16 Special
.35 cent Wings
Wednesday-Sunday Open at 4 pm
Home of the Original
O-Bar Pizza
AUCTIONS BY MARVA
213 E. LUZERNE AVE., LARKSVILLE
Wednesday, November 16 @ 4:30PM
Furniture, collectibles, glassware,
Precious Moments, Lenox, lots of
Christmas. Hall is full as usual.
10% BUYERS PREMIUM
AUCT: Marva Myslak AU-3247L
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM ID #3473 for
listing & lots of photos.
For Information: 570-822-8249
WVONMO VALLEV
415 Kidder Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
570.822.8870
steve@yourcarbank.com
www.wyomingvalleyautomart.com
*For qualied Buyers. Bi-weekly payments greater than 17
1/2% of monthly net income, additional
down-payment may be required. Costs to be paid by Buyer at delivery: registration, taxes, title, doc fee.
0
$
DOWN*
UV MEME PAV MEME UV MEME
JO-DAN
MOTORS
1339 N. RIVER STREET
PLAINS, PA. 18702
829-2043
www.jo-danmotors.com
10 MERCEDES E350C
Black Coupe, Only 9K Miles ...........................
$
45,995
07 DODGE DURANGO LIMITED
Charcoal, Hemi, Leather, Only 44K Miles.....
$
20,995
08 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE
White Pearl, Nicely Equipped, 48K Miles.....
$
24,995
10 FORD FUSION SE
White Pearl, Spoiler, 38K Miles......................
$
18,495
08 VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT
Blue, Nicely Equipped, 52K Miles..................
$
17,995
08 MAZDA 6I
Silver, Sunroof, Spoiler, 50K Miles.................
$
15,995
08 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GS
Copper, 5-Speed, Only 48K Miles..................
$
13,995
07 TOYOTA CAMRY LE
White, Nicely Equipped, Good Miles .............
$
13,995
07 DODGE CALIBER SXT
White, Nicely Equipped, 63K Miles ...............
$
10,995
08 SATURN AURA XE
Blue, Sunroof, P. Seat, PW, PDL......................
$
10,995
98 CADILLAC ELDORADO
Black, Sunroof, One Owner, 83K........................
$
7,995
TAXES AND TAGS ADDITIONAL. We Now Offer Buy Here - Pay Here!
Low Down Payment Clean, Inspected Vehicles
6 MO. WARRANTY ON ALL VEHICLES FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
We Service ALL Makes & Models
Family Owned & Operated for over 40 years
NORTHEAST PA TOP JOBS
The following companies are hiring:
Your company name will be listed on the front page
of The Times Leader Classieds the rst day your ad
appears on timesleader.com Northeast PA Top Jobs.
For more information contact The Times Leader sales
consultant in your area at 570-829-7130.
Bardane Manufacturing Company
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK CARS
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
HONEST PRICES
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call
Vito & Ginos
Anytime
288-8995
110 Lost
LOST
4 Pound Yorkshire Terrier
Short silver, black &
gold fur with ears
that stick straight
up. Missing collar.
Very friendly. Called
Gizmo or Gizzy.
Missing since 11/7,
5:30PM. Last seen
in Cedar Village
Apartments, Ashley.
REWARD OFFERED!
Please call Karine
607-765-4789 or
Inima 818-770-2852
LOST Chihuahua
Teacup.Missing
since 11/8/11. Last
seen on Mountain
Road, Plymouth.
Answers to the
name Krimpet.
Reward.
Call 570-779-1548
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LOST.
Chihuahua/Terrier
mix. Small, all white
except for half his
face & ear. Named
DJ. Lost near sports
complex in WB.
570-351-4614
120 Found
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Saturday
12:30 on Friday
Sunday
4:00 pm on
Friday
Monday
4:30 pm on
Friday
Tuesday
4:00 pm on
Monday
Wednesday
4:00 pm on
Tuesday
Thursday
4:00 pm on
Wednesday
Friday
4:00 pm on
Thursday
Holidays
call for deadlines
You may email
your notices to
mpeznowski@
timesleader.com
or fax to
570-831-7312
or mail to
The Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
For additional
information or
questions regard-
ing legal notices
you may call
Marti Peznowski
at 570-970-7371
or 570-829-7130
135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
LETTERS TESTA-
MENTARY have
been granted to
Mary Ellen Fichter,
P. O. Box 700, Mil-
nesville, Pennsylva-
nia, 18239,
Executrix of the
Estate of Andrew
Beckley, late of
Hazleton, Pennsyl-
vania, who died
October 13, 2011. All
persons indebted to
said estate please
make payment, and
those having claims
present same to:
ATTORNEY
RICHARD I.
BERNSTEIN
GIULIANI &
BERNSTEIN
101 W. Broad St.
Suite 301
Hazleton, PA
18201-6328
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
NOTICE OF
DISBARMENT
Notice is hereby
given that by Order
of the Supreme
Court of Pennsylva-
nia issued Novem-
ber 10, 2011,
Michael T. Conahan
is Disbarred on
Consent from the
Bar of the Com-
monwealth of
Pennsylvania to
be effective
December 10,
2011.
Elaine M. Bixler
Secretary of the
Board
The Disciplinary
Board of the
Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania
LEGAL NOTICE
TOWNSHIP
OF JENKINS
PUBLIC MEETING
NOTICE ACTON
TECHNOLOGIES
NOTICE IS HERE-
BY GIVEN that the
Jenkins Township
Board of Supervi-
sors will meet in
Public Session on
November 16th,
2011 beginning at
6:30pm. The pur-
pose of this meeting
is to discuss the
Application for Re-
Issuance of a per-
mit for Acton Tech-
nologies, Inc.,
Pittston, PA, DEP
Plan Approval No.
40-399-066.. This
permit will allow the
construction and
operation of the
existing plant facili-
ty, the thermal oxi-
dizer to control point
sources and fugitive
VOC emissions, and
the production line
NO. 4 for etching
PTFE materials. Also
public comments
will be heard on the
plans for expansion
of Acton facilities.
The meeting will be
held at the Jenkins
Township Municipal
Building, 46 Main
Street, Inkerman,
Pittston, PA. The
Board of Supervi-
sors will also act
and award on the
Garbage Bids, Sin-
gle Stream Recy-
cling Bids and the
CenterPont Plowing
Bids at this meeting.
Robert E. Jones
Township Manager
If you are a person
with a disability and
wish to attend this
meeting and require
auxiliary aid, service
accommodation to
participate in the
proceedings, please
contact the Town-
ship Manager,
Robert E Jones at
(570) 654-3315 to
discuss how the
Township may
accommodate your
needs.
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that on the
14th day of Novem-
ber, 2011, the peti-
tion of Sandhya
Reddy Rajidi was
filed in the Court of
Common Pleas of
Luzerne County,
requesting an Order
to change the name
of Sandhya Reddy
Rajidi to Sandhya
Rajidi Reddy.
The Court has fixed
a hearing on said
petition for the 27th
day of December,
2011 at 9:30 a.m.
oclock at the LCCH
3rd floor, when and
where all interested
parties may appear
and show cause, if
any, why the
request of the peti-
tioner should not be
granted.
NOTICE OF
SUSPENSION
Notice is hereby
given that on
November 10, 2011,
pursuant to Rule
214(d), Pa.R.D.E.,
the Supreme Court
of Pennsylvania
orders that
MICHAEL T. TOOLE
be placed on Tem-
porary Suspension
until further defini-
tive action by the
Supreme Court, to
be effective
December 10, 2011
Elaine M. Bixler
Secretary of the
Board
The Disciplinary
Board of the
Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania
145 Prayers
OH, HOLY ST. JUDE,
apostle and martyr,
great in virtue and
rich miracles. Near
kinsman of Jesus
Christ, faithful inter-
cessor of all who
invoke your special
patronage in time of
need, to you I have
recourse from the
depth of my heart
and humbly beg to
whom God has
given such great
power to come to
my assistance. Help
me in my present,
urgent petition
(make request). In
return, I promise to
make your name
known and cause
you to be invoked.
Say 3 Our Fathers,
3 Hail Marys and 3
Glorias. St. Jude ,
pray for me and all
who invoke your aid
humbly in need of
your intercession.
Amen (This novena
has never been
known to fail. It must
be said on nine con-
secutive days and
publications / distri-
butions must be
promised.)
Thank you St. Jude
for prayer
answered. LM
150 Special Notices
One third of
wedding cou-
ples employ a
personal wed-
ding consultant.
bridezella.net
COOKS PHARMACY
OF SHAVERTOWN
Is looking for
people who
have had knee
replacements
for a study to try a
new product
called WilloMD, a
mini computer to
help with knee
pain. Free of
charge.
Interested? Please call
570-675-1191
Ask for Meagan
150 Special Notices
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call V&G
Anytime
288-8995
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Going for 20 plus
today. Ben way
past it...Drust
has like 5.
Europe counts
as 100. Novem-
ber is the new
September...
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Please stop in at
Don's Deli
seeing this is the
last week it will
be located on
West End Road...
This is the count
down. Don's Deli
is moving to the
802 San Souci
Parkway. But
wait. Don's Deli
is still on West
End Road until
Wednesday
November 23.
Stop in and ask
questions.
P PA AYING $500 YING $500
MINIMUM
DRIVEN IN
Full size 4 wheel
drive trucks
ALSO PAYING TOP $$$
for heavy equip-
ment, backhoes,
dump trucks,
bull dozers
HAPPY TRAILS
TRUCK SALES
570-760-2035
542-2277
6am to 8pm
Psychic Readings
by Doreena
Find answers and
peace of mind
thru psychic &
spiritual readings
and chakra bal-
ancing meditations
Call today for a
better tomorrow!
Mention this ad
for $10 off!
610-377-5114
380 Travel
Radio City
Christmas
Show
Wed. Dec. 7 $90
Jersey Boys
Wed. Jan 18 $150
Wicked
Wed. Feb. 1 $169
CALL ROSEANN
@ 570-655-4247
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK 2011 UTILITY ATV
NEW!! Full size
adult ATV. Strong 4
stroke motor. CVT
fully automatic
transmission with
reverse. Electric
start. Front & rear
luggage racks.
Long travel suspen-
sion. Disc brakes.
Dual stage head
lights. Perfect for
hunters & trail rid-
ers alike. BRAND NEW
& READY TO RIDE.
$1,695 takes it
away.
386-334-7448
Wilkes-Barre
409 Autos under
$5000
CADILLAC `94
DEVILLE SEDAN
94,000 miles,
automatic, front
wheel drive, 4
door, air condi-
tioning, air bags,
all power, cruise
control, leather
interior, $3,300.
570-394-9004
CADILLAC 03
DeVille. Excellent
shape, all leather.
$4650. BUICK 03
Century. Great
shape $3400
570-819-3140
570-709-5677
To place your
ad call...829-7130
CHEVY 95 BLAZER
4 door. 92 K.
New brakes &
gas tank. New
inspection.
$3,895
409 Autos under
$5000
DODGE `95 DAKOTA
2WD V6. Regular
Cab/6Ft. 5 speed.
113,000 miles. Runs
like a champ. Needs
some work. $1,400.
570-814-1255
DODGE 01 GRAND
CARAVAN EX
Loaded. 7 pas-
sengers. Rear
bucket seats.
New inspection.
$3,995.
FORD `95 F150
4x4. 6 cylinder.
Automatic. 8 ft.
modified flat bed.
90k miles. Runs
great. $4,900
(570) 675-5046
Call after 6:00 p.m.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
FORD 98 EXPLORER
4 door 4x4. New
inspection.
$3,695
FORD 99 ESCORT
STATION WAGON
One owner, 91k,
new inspection.
$3,495
409 Autos under
$5000
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
HYUNDAI 00 ACCENT
4 cylinder. 5
speed. Sharp
economy car!
$2,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
LEOS AUTO SALES
92 Butler St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
PONTIAC 01 SUNFIRE
2 door 4 cylinder,
auto, new tires,
excellent condition
$2,150
HYUNDAI 02 ACCENT
4 door 4 cylinder,
auto. 91,000 miles
$1,850
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
SATURN `04 VUE
65K, Auto, Loaded.
Needs transmis-
sion/airbags. Book
value $10,000. Sell
$3,000 or best offer
(570) 829-2875
(570) 332-1252
409 Autos under
$5000
NISSAN 01 SENTRA
4 door. Auto.
Power galore.
New inspection.
$4,495.
412 Autos for Sale
AUDI `01 A6
QUATTRO
123,000 miles, 4.2
liter V8, 300hp, sil-
ver with black
leather,heated
steering wheel, new
run flat tires, 17
rims, 22 mpg, Ger-
man mechanic
owned.
$7,500. OBO.
570-822-6785
AUDI `04 A6 QUATTRO
3.0 V6. Silver. New
tires & brakes. 130k
highway miles.
Leather interior.
Heated Seats.
$7,500 or best offer.
570-905-5544
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
PAGE 2D TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
2012 Mazda3 i
Touring Sedan
#612060, Vin#JM1BL1V87C151600, Automatic 6 Speed Trans.,
P. Windows, P. Locks, Bluetooth, Traction Control, Stability Control,
Awesome Fuel Economy! 3 Available for Immediate Delivery!
www.bergerfamilygm.com
1.9% FINANCING FOR 60 MOS!
UP TO 47 MPG HIGHWAY (AUTOMATIC)
ITS HERE!
MAZDA
SKYACTIV MAZDA3
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468 Auto Parts
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
VITOS
&
GINOS
Like New
Tires
$15 & UP!
Like New
Batteries
$20 & UP!
Carry Out Price
288-8995
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
310 Attorney
Services
AGGRESSIVE &
Affordable DUI
Defense
Law Office of
Michael P. Kelly
570-417-5561
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
310 Attorney
Services
ESTATE PLANNING
/ADMINISTRATION
Real Estate &
Civil Litigation
Attorney Ron Wilson
570-822-2345
Free Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-822-1959
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
412 Autos for Sale
ACURA `06 TL
White Diamond
80K original miles,1
owner, garage kept,
camel leather interi-
or, 3.2L / 6 cylinder,
5-speed automatic,
front/rear & side
airbags, ABS
Navigation System,
8-speaker surround
system DVD/CD/AM
/FM/cassette,XM
Satellite Radio,
power & heated
front seats,power-
door locks & win-
dows, power moon-
roof, 4 snow tires
included!....and
much, much
more! Car runs and
looks beautiful
$17,500 Firm
See it at
Orloskis Car Wash
& Lube
295 Mundy Street
(behind Wyoming
Valley Mall)
or Call 239-8461
AUDI `01 A6
QUATTRO
123,000 miles, 4.2
liter V8, 300hp, sil-
ver with black
leather,heated
steering wheel, new
run flat tires, 17
rims, 22 mpg, Ger-
man mechanic
owned.
$7,500. OBO.
570-822-6785
412 Autos for Sale
AUDI `05 A6
3.2 Quattro AT6.
Auto tiptronic 6
speed. Black with
black leather. Garage
kept. Fully loaded,
gps, cold weather
package. 78K miles.
Carfax report
included. $15,900.
570-814-6714
AUDI `96 QUATTRO
A6 station wagon.
143k miles. 3rd row
seating. $2,800 or
best offer. Call
570-861-0202
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
BMW `01 X5
4.4i. Silver, fully
loaded, tan leather
interior. 1 owner.
103k miles. $8,999
or best offer. Call
570-814-3666
BMW `07 328xi
Black with black
interior. Heated
seats. Back up &
navigation sys-
tems. New tires &
brakes. Sunroof.
Garage kept. Many
extras! 46,000
Miles.
Asking $20,500.
570-825-8888 or
626-297-0155
Call Anytime!
412 Autos for Sale
BMW `99 M3
Convertible with
Hard Top. AM/FM. 6
disc CD. 117 K miles.
Stage 2 Dinan sus-
pension. Cross
drilled rotors. Cold
air intake. All main-
tenance records
available. $11,500
OBO. 570-466-2630
BMW 04 325 XI
White. Fully
loaded. 120k
miles. $10,500
or best offer.
570-454-3287
BMW 04 325 XI
White. Fully
loaded. 120k
miles. $10,500
or best offer.
570-454-3287
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
BMW 98 740 IL
White with beige
leather interior.
New tires, sunroof,
heated seats. 5 cd
player 106,000
miles. Excellent
condition.
$5,500. OBO
570-451-3259
570-604-0053
412 Autos for Sale
BUICK `05 LESABRE
Garage kept. 1
owner. Local driv-
ing, very good
condition.
53,500 miles.
Asking $9,700
(570) 457-6414
leave message
CADILLAC
`94 SEVILLE
8,900 original miles,
original owner, black
on black. Still new.
Serious buyers only.
$7,950
(570) 693-3938
CHEVROLET `03
IMPALA
97,000 miles,
$3,300.
570-592-4522
570-592-4994
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
CHEVROLET `88
MONTE CARLO SS
V8, automatic,
51,267 miles,
MUST SELL
$3,900
(570) 760-0511
412 Autos for Sale
CHEVROLET 06
CORVETTE
CONVERTIBLE
Silver beauty, 1
Owner, Museum
quality. 4,900
miles, 6 speed. All
possible options
including Naviga-
tion, Power top.
New, paid $62,000
Must sell $45,900
570-299-9370
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
CHEVY '99 MALIBU
Classic. 6 cylin-
der. Auto. Many
options. 48K.
Warrantied.
$4,895.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
DODGE `02 DURAN-
GO SLT
All power, 4.7, all
leather, 7 passen-
ger, running boards,
80,000 miles, CD
player, new tires.
$7,000.
570-877-9896
412 Autos for Sale
ACME AUTO SALES
343-1959
1009 Penn Ave
Scranton 18509
Across from Scranton Prep
GOOD CREDIT, BAD
CREDIT, NO CREDIT
Call Our Auto Credit
Hot Line to get
Pre-approved for a
Car Loan!
800-825-1609
www.acmecarsales.net
11 AUDI S5 QUATTRO
CONVERTIBLE
Sprint blue/black
& tan leather,
auto, 7 speed,
turbo, 330 HP,
Navigation,(AWD)
09 CHRYSLER SEBRING
4 door, alloys,
seafoam blue.
08 PONTIAC GRAND
PRIX SE
blue, auto V6
07 HYUNDAI SONATA
GLS navy blue,
auto, alloys
07 CHRYSLER 300
LTD AWD silver,
grey leather
06 PONTIAC G6
black, auto, 4 cyl.
06 DODGE STRATUS SXT
RED.
05 DODGE NEON SXT
Red, 4 cyl. auto
05 CHEVY IMPALA LS
Burgundy tan
leather, sunroof
05 VW NEW JETTA
gray, auto, 4 cyl
05 CHEVY MALIBU
Maxx White, grey
leather, sunroof
04 NISSAN ALTIMA SL
3.5 white, black
leather, sun roof
03 CADILLAC SEDAN
Pearl white, tan
leather, 73k miles
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO
Mid blue/light grey
leather, Naviga-
tion, (AWD)
01 VW JETTA GLS
green, auto, 4 cyl
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
98 MAZDA MILLENIA
green
98 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS black
98 HONDA CIVIC EX,
2 dr, auto, silver
97 BUICK PARK
AVENUE, black/tan
leather
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
08 JEEP PATRIOT
SPORT silver
5 speed 4x4
08 CADILLAC ESCALADE
Blk/Blk leather, 3rd
seat, Navgtn, 4x4
07 CHEVY UPLANDER
silver, 7 passen-
ger mini van
07 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT Blue
grey leather, 7
passenger mini van
06 MITSUBISHI
ENDEAVOR XLS,
Blue auto, V6, awd
06 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN ES, red,
4dr, entrtnmt cntr,
7 pass mini van
05 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LT, blue, grey
leather, 4x4
05 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT blue 4x4
05 FORD ESCAPE LTD
red, black leather,
sunrooof, 4x4
05 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
Blue, auto, 4x4
05 FORD F150 XLT
SUPER CREW TRUCK
Blue & tan, 4 dr. 4x4
05 BUICK RANIER CXL
gold, tan, leather,
sunroof (AWD)
05 GMC SIERRA
X-Cab, blk, auto,
4x4 truck
04 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER, black,
black leather,
3rd seat, 4x4
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE OVERLAND
Graphite grey,
2 tone leather,
sunroof, 4x4
04 FORD EXPEDITION
Eddie Bauer,
white & tan,
tan leather,
3rd seat, 4x4
04 CHEVY SUBURBAN
LS, pewter silver,
3rd seat, 4x4
03 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO,
silver, V6, 4x4
03 FORD WINDSTAR LX
green 4 door, 7
passenger mini van
02 CHRYSLER TOWN &
COUNTRY 7 pas
senger, mini van,
gold AWD
02 CHEVY 2500 HD
Reg. Cab. pickup
truck, green,
auto, 4x4
01 FORD EXCURSION
XLT blue, auto, 8
passenger 4x4
00 NISSAN PATHFINDER
SE Black, 5
speed, sunroof,
50K miles, 4x4
00 CHEVY BLAZER LT
Black & brown,
brown leather 4x4
00 ISUZU RODEO
silver, auto 4x4
00 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO XCAB
2wd truck,
burgundy & tan
98 EXPLORER XLT
Blue grey leather,
sunroof, 4x4
97 DODGE RAM 1500
XCAB TRUCK
red, auto, 4 x 4
96 CVEVY BLAZER
black 4x4
CHRYSLER 04
SEBRING CONVERTIBLE
Silver, 2nd owner
clean title. Very
clean inside &
outside. Auto,
Power mirrors,
windows. CD
player, cruise,
central console
heated power
mirrors. 69,000
miles. $4900.
570-991-5558
DODGE `97
CARAVAN
139,000 miles, new
brakes, runs well,
body is fair. $1,275.
570-603-0252
GEO `93 PRIZM
91,000 miles. Looks
& runs like new.
$2,300 or best
offer, please call
570-702-6023
412 Autos for Sale
10 Dodge Cara-
van SXT 32K. Sil-
ver-Black. Power
slides. Factory war-
ranty. $17,899
09 DODGE
CALIBER SXT 2.0
Automatic, 24k
Factory Warranty!
$12,499
08 CHEVY IMPALA
LS Only 18K! One
Owner - Estate
Sale. $14,699
08 SUBARU
Special Edition
42k, 5 speed, AWD.
Factory warranty.
$13,699
08 CHEVY
SILVERADO 1500
4x4, Regular Cab,
63K, Factory War-
ranty $13,699
08 CHEVY IMPALA
LS 4 door, only
37K! 5 Yr. 100K fac-
tory warranty
$12,099
08 CHRYSLER
SEBRING CONVERTIBLE
4 cylinder, 40k
$11,799
08 CHEVY IMPALA
LS 60k. Factory
warranty. $10,199
05 HONDA CRV EX
One owner, just
traded, 65k
$13,299
05 Suzuki
Verona LX Auto.
64K. Factory war-
ranty. $5,599
01 LINCOLN TOWN
CAR Executive 74K
$5,899
CROSSROAD
MOTORS
570-825-7988
700 Sans Souci
Highway
W WE E S S E L L E L L
F O R F O R L L E S S E S S ! ! ! !
TITLE TAGS
FULL NOTARY
SERVICE
6 MONTH WARRANTY
FORD `04 MUSTANG
Mach I, 40th
ANNIVERSARY EDITION
V8, Auto, 1,200
miles, all options,
show room condi-
tion. Call for info.
Asking $24,995
Serious inquiries
only. 570-636-3151
FORD `08 ESCAPE
XLT. 56,800 miles.
Grey metallic with
grey cloth interior.
2WD. Auto. Power
windows & locks.
Dual air bags. A/C.
Alloy Wheels. Excel-
lent condition.
$14,500
Trades Welcome
570-328-5497
HONDA `05
ACCORD EX-L
V6 sedan, auto-
matic transmis-
sion with naviga-
tion. Graphite
exterior, grey lath-
er interior, cruise
control, power
bucket seats, tint-
ed glass, remote
keyless entry, anti-
lock brakes,
airbags - driver,
passenger &
sides. Sun roof /
moon roof. Rear
window defogger,
air conditioning
front & rear,
power steering,
alloy wheels, Multi
CD changer, navi-
gation system, fog
lights, premium
sound excellent
condition, timing
belt changed.
$9,500.
Top Off The Line
570-814-0949
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
NISSAN `08 SENTRA
58K miles. 4 cylin-
der, 6 speed manu-
al. Great condition.
All power. A/C.
Cruise. $10,500.
Call 570-333-4379
after 6:30 pm
412 Autos for Sale
HYUNDAI `00
ELANTRA
Low mileage,
59,000 miles, auto-
matic, front wheel
drive, 4 door, air
conditioning, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors,
cruise control, AM/
FM radio, cassette
player. $3,800
(570)779-5347
Call after 10:00 a.m.
HYUNDAI `02
ELANTRA
129,995 miles,
manual, 4 door,
anti-lock brakes, air
conditioning, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors, CD
player, leather inte-
rior, sun roof, rear
windshield wiper,
tinted windows,
GREAT ON GAS.
REDUCED $3,000.
570-654-8469
HYUNDAI 06
ELANTRA
Tan, 4 door,
clean title, 4
cylinder, auto,
115k miles.
Power windows,
& keyless entry,
CD player,
cruise, central
console heated
power mirrors.
$3900
570-991-5558
JAGUAR `00 S TYPE
4 door sedan. Like
new condition. Bril-
liant blue exterior
with beige hides.
Car is fully equipped
with navigation sys-
tem, V-8, automatic,
climate control AC,
alarm system,
AM/FM 6 disc CD,
garage door open-
er. 42,000 original
miles. $9,500
Call (570) 288-6009
JAGUAR `00 S TYPE
4 door sedan. Like
new condition. Bril-
liant blue exterior
with beige hides.
Car is fully equipped
with navigation sys-
tem, V-8, automatic,
climate control AC,
alarm system,
AM/FM 6 disc CD,
garage door open-
er. 42,000 original
miles. $9,500
Call (570) 288-6009
JAGUAR 94
XJS CONVERTIBLE
Mint Condition
Magnolia red,
with palomino
beige leather
interior. A
cream puff
inside & out.
4 new tires and
services. Florida
car. $14,900.
570-885-1512
JEEP `04
WRANGLER
4 lift, 33 BFG
base KM2, 5
speed, excellent
condition, 46,200
miles. $12,500.
OBO.
Call 570-592-1829
LEXUS `98 LS 400
Excellent condition,
garage kept, 1
owner. Must see.
Low mileage, 90K.
Leather interior. All
power. GPS naviga-
tion, moon roof, cd
changer. Loaded.
$9,000 or best
offer. 570-706-6156
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
LINCOLN 06
Town Car Limited
Fully loaded.
50,000 miles,
Triple coated
Pearlized White.
Showroom
condition.
$16,900.
(570) 814-4926
(570) 654-2596
NISSAN `08 XTERRA
Grey, Mint condition.
35K miles. New, all-
season tires. Sirius
radio. 2 sets of
mats, including
cargo mats.
$18,400. Call
570-822-3494 or
570-498-0977
412 Autos for Sale
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
PONTIAC 02 SUNFIRE
2 door. Very
clean! Warrantied.
75K. $5,695.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
PONTIAC `04 VIBE
White. New manual
transmission &
clutch. Front wheel
drive. 165k highway
miles. Great on gas.
Good condition,
runs well. $3,000 or
best offer
570-331-4777
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
PONTIAC 01 GRAND AM
4 cylinder. Auto.
Sharp Sharp Car!
$2,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
PORSCHE `01
BOXSTER S
Biarritz white, con-
vertible,new
$58,000, 3.2 liter, 6
cylinder, 250HP.
Loaded with all the
extra options. Less
than 15,000 miles.
$21,000
570-586-0401
PORSCHE `85 944
Low mileage,
110,000 miles, 5
speed, 2 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, power
windows, power
mirrors, AM/FM
radio, CD changer,
leather interior, rear
defroster, tinted
windows, custom
wheels, $8,000.
(570) 817-1803
SAAB `06 93
A E R O s p o r t .
Leather interior.
Heated seats. Sun-
roof. Good condi-
tion. $8,000. Seri-
ous inquiries only.
Call 570-760-8264
SUBARU `02 FORESTER
L. AWD. Red.
$2,850. Hail dam-
age. Runs great.
Auto, air, CD, cas-
sette, cruise, tilt. All
power. 174K miles.
Mechanical inspec-
tion welcomed. Call
570-561-9217
SUZUKI 10 SX4
4x4 6,000 miles.
$14,500.
95 Mercedes
66,000 miles.
$8,995.
08 Ford F250, 4x4
4,000 miles, 4 door,
8 foot bed/with
plow. $45,000.
All showroom new!
570-826-0200 or
570-868-3968
TOYOTA `10
Camry SE. 56,000
miles. Red, alloy
wheels, black cloth
interior. Will consid-
er trade. $14,200
(570) 793-9157
412 Autos for Sale
TOYOTA 00
SOLARA SE
SUPER CLEAN
All power, new
tires, new back
brakes. 125,000
miles. $8000 OBO
570-417-8353
VOLKSWAGEN `04
Beetle - Convertible
GREAT ON GAS!
Blue. AM/FM cas-
sette. Air. Automat-
ic. Power roof, win-
dows, locks &
doors. Boot cover
for top. 22k. Excel-
lent condition.
Garage kept.
Newly Reduced
$14,000
570-479-7664
Leave Message
VOLKSWAGEN 00
BEETLE
2.0 automatic, air
67k miles $6400.
570-466-0999
VOLVO 850 95
Runs good, Air,
automatic, fair
shape. $2,000.
347-693-4156
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CHEVY 30 HOTROD COUPE
$49,000
FORD 76 THUNDERBIRD
All original $12,000
MERCEDES 76 450 SL
$24,000
MERCEDES 29
Kit Car $9,000
(570) 655-4884
hell-of-adeal.com
FORD `52
COUNTRY SEDAN
CUSTOM LINE
STATION WAGON
V8, automatic,
8 passenger,
3rd seat, good
condition, 2nd
owner. REDUCED TO
$6,500.
570-579-3517
570-455-6589
MERCEDES 1975
Good interior &
interior. Runs
great! New tires.
Many new parts.
Moving, Must Sell.
$2,300 or
best offer
570-693-3263
Ask for Paul
MERCEDES-BENZ `73
450SL
Convertible with
removable hard top,
power windows, AM
/FM radio with cas-
sette player, CD
player, automatic, 4
new tires. Cham-
pagne exterior; Ital-
ian red leather inte-
rior inside. Garage
kept, excellent con-
dition. $28,000. Call
825-6272
PONTIAC `68 CATALINA
Convertible. 400
engine. 2 barrel car-
buretor. Yellow with
black roof and white
wall tires. Black
interior. $4,500
negotiable.
570-696-3513
Line up a place to live
in classified!
MODEL A FORD PARTS
Too many to list.
Call for list:
570-655-0607
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 3D
FREE STATE INSPECTION AS
LONG AS YOU OWN THE CAR!
CALL NOW 823-8888 CALL NOW 823-8888
1-800-817-FORD 1-800-817-FORD
Overlooking Mohegan Sun Overlooking Mohegan Sun
577 East Main St., Plains 577 East Main St., Plains
Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B VISIT US AT WWW.COCCIACARS.COM
*Tax and tags extra. Security Deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months
payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. See salesperson for details. All payments subject to credit approval by the primary lending source, Tier 0 rate.
Special APR financing cannot be combined with Ford cash rebate. BUY FOR prices are based on 72 month at $18.30 per month per $1000 financed with $2,500 down (cash or trade). Photos of
vehicles are for illustration purposes only. Coccia Ford is not responsible for any typographical errors. No Security Deposit Necessary. See dealer for details. Sale ends NOVEMBER 30, 2011.
15K MILES!
11K MILES!
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTING AT
15K MILES!
2,000 MILES!
10K MILES!
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE FROM
TO CHOOSE FROM
STARTING
AT
15K MILES!
TO CHOOSE FROM
STARTING AT
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE FROM
24K MILES!
TO CHOOSE FROM
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE FROM
37K MILES!
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE FROM
PAGE 4D TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
551 Other
512 Business/
Strategic
Management
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
512 Business/
Strategic
Management
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
554 Production/
Operations
468 Auto Parts
554 Production/
Operations
468 Auto Parts
554 Production/
Operations
554 Production/
Operations
468 Auto Parts 468 Auto Parts
AS ALWAYS ****HIGHEST PRICES*****
PAID FOR YOUR UNWANTED
VEHICLES!!!
DRIVE IN PRICES
Call for Details (570) 459-9901
Vehicles must be COMPLETE !!
Plus Enter to Win $500.00 Cash!!
DRAWING TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 30
Harrys U Pull It
www.wegotused.com
7
1
5
1
9
4
Earn Cash For
Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
To nd a route near you and start
earning extra cash, call Rosemary at
570-829-7107
Swoyersville
$420 Monthly Prot + Tips
93 daily papers / 102 Sunday papers
Chestnut Street, Diamond Street, Main Street
Grandville Drive
Luzerne
$440 Monthly Prot + Tips
103 daily papers / 115 Sunday papers
Bennett Street, Charles Street,
Hughes Street, North Street
Shickshinny/Mocanaqua
Monthly Prot + Tips
87 daily papers / 112 Sunday papers
East Buter Street, N. Canal Street, Church Street,
West Union Street, Italy Street, Jeanette Street,
Main Street
Wilkes-Barre (North)
Monthly Prot + Tips
222 daily papers / 251 Sunday papers
Coal Street, Custer Street, North Empire Street,
Logan Street, North Sherman Street
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
timesleader.com
Pre-employment drug screening and background check required.
Interested candidates should send letter of interest, resume and salary history to:
The Times Leader
Human Resources Department
15 N. Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
hiring@timesleader.com
No Telephone Calls Please!
We are an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity in the workplace.
Inserter/Packager
Immediate Need
The Times Leader has immediate openings for part time Inserter/Packager
for our Packaging Department.
Experience preferred, but will train the right candidate.
This position reports directly to the Packaging Supervisor.
Duties include but are not limited to:
Opening of insert skids
Feeding of circulars into assigned hoppers
Stackdown of ROP
Clean up of Packaging Department at the end of assigned shift
Employees must be able to work fexible hours,
be able to lift at least 25 lbs. and have own vehicle.
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJooooobbbbbsssssssssssss ooooob JJJJJJJJJJ Autos
THE TIMES LEADER
timesleaderautos.com
Lord & Taylor is looking for aggressive,
analytical and results-oriented individuals with
strong PC skills and excellent communication
skills to work in our Wilkes-Barre Service Center.
The executive level opportunity available is:
STAFFING COORDINATOR
Manages staffing/hours for stores to provide
effective customer service while monitoring
expense. Works directly with 24 stores from our
Wilkes-Barre location to develop and implement
computerized staffing plans.
Bilingual (French) preferred not required.
Strong PC skills including extensive Excel and
Access experience along with the ability to
develop/support macros required. Qualified
candidates will have a business-related, 4-year
degree. Experience in a retail environment pre-
ferred; strong analytical skills are key to success.
Interested candidates should send resume along
with salary history to:
Lord & Taylor Service Center
Attn: Human Resources
250 Highland Park Blvd.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
Fax: 570-821-6370
Or visit our career website at
www.loarandtaylor.com/careers
We offer a competitive salary,
medical/dental/vision/life insurance, 401(k).
We also offer generous merchandise discounts.
Lord & Taylor is an equal opportunity employer.
AUTOMOTIVE SALES
CONSULTANTS
Valley Chevrolet is seeking
individuals who are self-starters,
team-oriented and driven.
(No experience necessary)
We Offer:
Salary & Commission Benefts
401k Plan 5 Day Work Week
Huge New & Used Inventory
Apply in person to:
Blake Gagliardi, Sales Manager
Rick Merrick, Sales Manager
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre
BUYING JUNK
VEHICLES
$300 AND UP
$125 EXTRA IF DRIVEN,
DRAGGED OR PUSHED IN!
NOBODY Pays More
570-760-2035
Monday thru Saturday 6am-9pm Happy Trails!
548 Medical/Health 548 Medical/Health
LPNs
Part Time Evening Shift
CNAs
Full & Part Time, Per Diem
7-3, 3-11 & 11-7
Activity Aides
Part Time
Immediate openings available,
Dont delay apply today!
Great Pay, Shift Differentials & Benefits
For more information or to request
An interview please contact
877-339-6999 x1 Or 570-735-2973.
Email resumes to Jobs@horizonhrs.com
Walk in applications accepted
395 Middle Road, Nanticoke
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
OLDSMOBILE
`68
DELMONT
Must Sell!
Appraised
for $9,200
All original
45,000 miles
350 Rocket
engine
Fender skirts
Always
garaged
Will sell for
$6,000
Serious
inquires only
570-
690-0727
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PORSCHE 78
911 SC TARGA
60,000 miles. 5
speed. Air. Power
windows. Metallic
brown. Saddle Inte-
rior. Meticulous
original owner.
Garaged. New
Battery. Inspected.
Excellent Condition.
$25,000. OBO
(610) 797-7856
(484) 264-2743
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
GMC SIERRA 98 3500
4WD Stake Side,
350 V8, Auto.
75,000 miles on
current engine. 12'
wood bed, body,
tires, interior good.
Excellent running
condition. New
generator, starter,
battery. Just tuned
and inspected.
$6,900.
Call 570-656-1080
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
439 Motorcycles
96 HONDA
American Classic
Edition. 1100 cc. 1
owner, under
20,000 miles. Yel-
low and white,
extra chrome, VNH
exhaust, bags,
lights, MC jack, bat-
tery tender, hel-
mets. Asking $3500
570-288-7618
HARLEY 2011
HERITAGE SOFTTAIL
Black. 1,800 miles.
ABS brakes. Securi-
ty System Package.
$16,000 firm.
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
570-704-6023
HARLEY
DAVIDSON 01
Electra Glide, Ultra
Classic, many
chrome acces-
sories, 13k miles,
Metallic Emerald
Green. Garage
kept, like new
condition. Includes
Harley cover.
$12,900
570-718-6769
570-709-4937
HARLEY DAVIDSON
03 Dyna Wide Glide
Excellent condition -
garage kept! Gold-
en Anniversary - sil-
ver/black. New
Tires. Extras.
19,000 miles.
Must Sell!
$10,000.
570-639-2539
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
SCREAMING EAGLE
V-ROD
Orange & Black.
Used as a show
bike. Never abused.
480 miles. Excellent
condition. Asking
$15,000
570-876-4034
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
V-ROD VRSCA
Blue pearl,
excellent condition,
3,100 miles, factory
alarm with extras.
$10,500.
or best offer.
Tony 570-237-1631
HARLEY DAVIDSON
2006 NIGHTTRAIN
SPECIAL EDITION
#35 of 50 Made
$10,000 in acces-
sories including a
custom made seat.
Exotic paint set,
Alien Spider Candy
Blue. Excellent con-
dition. All Documen-
tation. 1,400 Asking
$15,000
570-876-4034
HARLEY DAVIDSON 80
Soft riding FLH.
King of the High-
way! Mint origi-
nal antique show
winner. Factory
spot lights, wide
white tires,
biggest Harley
built. Only
28,000 original
miles! Never
needs inspec-
tion, permanent
registration.
$7,995
570-905-9348
HONDA 84
XL200R
8,000 original miles,
excellent condition.
$1,000.
570-379-3713
HYOSUNG `04 COMET
250. 157 Miles.
Excellent Condition.
$1,200. Call
570-256-7760
439 Motorcycles
KAWASAKI 05
NINJA 500R. 3300
miles. Orange.
Garage kept. His &
hers helmets. Must
sell. $2400
570-760-3599
570-825-3711
Kawasaki` 93
ZX11D NINJA
LIKE NEW
8900 Original
miles. Original
owner. V@H
Exhaust and Com-
puter. New tires.
$3,800.
570-574-3584
POLARIS 00
VICTORY CRUISER
14,000 miles,
92 V-twin, 1507 cc,
extras $6000.
570-883-9047
YAMAHA 97
ROYALSTAR 1300
12,000 miles. With
windshield. Runs
excellent. Many
extras including
gunfighter seat,
leather bags, extra
pipes. New tires &
battery. Asking
$4,000 firm.
(570) 814-1548
442 RVs & Campers
CHEROKEE 10
Travel trailer. 39 ft.,
4 slide outs, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 bath
rooms, microwave,
awning, tinted win-
dows, Brand new.
Have no pets or
smokers. Much
more!!!!!
$33,000
(cell) 682-888-2880
FLAGSTAFF `08
CLASSIC
NOW BACK IN PA.
Super Lite Fifth
Wheel. LCD/DVD
flat screen TV, fire-
place, heated mat-
tress, ceiling fan,
Hide-a-Bed sofa,
outside speakers &
grill, 2 sliders,
aluminum wheels, ,
awning, microwave
oven, tinted safety
glass windows,
fridge & many
accessories &
options. Excellent
condition, $22,500.
570-868-6986
PACE 99 ARROW VISION
Ford V10. Excellent
condition. 8,700
miles. 1 slide out. 2
awnings. 2 colored
TVs, generator,
back up camera, 2
air conditioners,
microwave/convec-
tion oven, side by
side refrigerator
with ice maker,
washer/dryer,
queen size bed.
$37,900 negotiable
(570) 288-4826
(570) 690-1464
SUNLINE SOLARIS `91
25 travel trailer A/C.
Bunk beds. New
fridge & hot water
heater. Excellent
condition. $3,900.
570-466-4995
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
BUICK `05
RENDEZVOUS
BARGAIN!!
AWD, Fully
loaded, 1 owner,
22,000 miles.
Small 6 cylinder.
New inspection.
Like new, inside
& out. $13,000.
(570) 540-0975
CHEVROLET `10
SILVERADO 1500
Extended Cab V71
Package 4x4. Bed-
liner. V-8. 5.3 Liter.
Red. Remote start.
Garage kept. 6,300
miles $26,000
(570) 639-2539
CHEVY `10 SILVERADO
4 Door Crew Cab
LTZ. 4 wheel drive.
Excellent condition,
low mileage.
$35,500. Call
570-655-2689
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
CHEVY 00 S-10
2WD. 4 Cylinder. 5
speed. $3,895.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
CHEVY `00 SILVERADO
1500. 4x4. 8 box.
Auto. A/C. 121K
miles. $5,995.
570-332-1121
CHEVY `99 SILVERADO
Auto. V6 Vortec.
Standard cab. 8
bed with liner. Dark
Blue. 98,400 miles.
$6,200 or best offer
570-823-8196
CHEVY 95 ASTRO
AWD. Good tires.
V6. Auto. 149,000
miles. Power every-
thing. Heavy duty
tow package. Runs
good. Just passed
inspection. Kelly
Blue Book $2,500.
Selling: $1,650
(570) 855-8235
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHRYSLER 02
TOWN & COUNTRY
V6. Like new!
$5,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
DODGE 97 2500
4X4, CUMMI NS
Extended Cab.
Good Shape.
$9,500 negotiable.
(570) 954-7461
FORD `00 WINDSTAR
SE. 7 passenger, 4
door, V6, all power,
inspected, well
maintained, excel-
lent family van,
reduced to $2,495.
570-287-3951
FORD `04 EXPLORER
Eddie Bauer Edition
59,000 miles,
4 door, 3 row
seats, V6, all power
options, moon roof,
video screen
$12,999.
570-690-3995 or
570-287-0031
FORD 05 ESCAPE XLS
4 Cylinder. 5
speed. Front
wheel drive. air.
Warranted.
$7,895.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 00 EXPLORER
XLT. CD. Power
seats. Extra
Clean! $3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02 F150
Extra Cab. 6
Cylinder, 5 speed.
Air. 2WD. $4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02 RANGER EDGE
Extra cab. 5
speed. 6 cylinder.
2 wheel drive.
Extra sharp truck!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD 99 EXPLORER
Leather.
Moonroof. 4x4.
New Inspection.
$3,995
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 99 F150
Shortbox. 1 owner.
New truck trade!
$4,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
GMC '02 SAFARI
CARGO VAN
AWD. Auto. War-
rantied. $5,195
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
HYUNDAI '04 SANTA FE
4 Cylinder. Auto.
Front wheel drive.
78K. Very clean!.
Warrantied.
$7,795.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
JEEP 04
GRAND CHEROKEE
4.0 - 6 cylinder.
Auto. 4x4. Air.
Many options -
very clean! 1
owner. War-
rantied. $9,295.
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
JEEP `02 GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
Triple black, eco-
nomical 6 cylinder.
4x4 select drive.
CD, remote door
opener, power win-
dows & locks,
cruise, tilt wheel.
108k highway miles.
Garage kept. Super
clean inside and out.
No rust. Sale price
$6,895. Scranton.
Trade ins accepted.
570-466-2771
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
JEEP 04 LIBERTY
Auto. V6.
Black Beauty!
$6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
LEXUS `96 LX 450
Full time 4WD, Pearl
white with like new
leather ivory interi-
or. Silver trim.
Garage kept. Excel-
lent condition.
84,000 miles, Ask-
ing $10,750
570-654-3076 or
570-498-0005
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 03 MPV VAN
V6. CD Player.
1 owner vehicle!!
$2,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
MERCEDES-BENZ
`99 ML 320
Sunroof, new tires,
115,930 miles
MUST SELL
Only $200/ month
(570)760-0511
MERCURY `07
MARINER
One owner. Luxury
4x4. garage kept.
Showroom condi-
tion, fully loaded,
every option
34,000 miles.
GREAT DEAL
$14,500
(570)825-5847
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
MITSUBISHI `11
OUTLANDER SPORT SE
AWD, Black interi-
or/exterior, start/
stop engine with
keyless entry, heat-
ed seats, 18 alloy
wheels, many extra
features. Only
4,800 miles. 10
year, 100,000 mile
warranty. $23,500.
Willing to negotiate.
Serious inquires
only - must sell,
going to law school.
(570) 793-6844
MITSUBISHI 06
OUTLANDER
Very nice! 4 cylin-
der. Auto. 4WD.
$8,395
BUY * SELL * TRADE
D.P. MOTORS
1451 SHOEMAKER
AVE, W. WYOMING
570-714-4146
SUZUKI `03 XL-7
85K. 4x4. Auto.
Nice, clean interior.
Runs good. New
battery & brakes. All
power. CD. $6,800
570-762-8034
570-696-5444
SUZUKI `07 XL-7
56,000 miles,
automatic,
all-wheel drive,
4 door, air condi-
tioning, all power,
CD player, leather
interior, tinted
windows, custom
wheels, $13,000
Call 570-829-8753
Before 5:00 p.m.
VOLVO `08 XC90
Fully loaded, moon
roof, leather, heat-
ed seats, electric
locks, excellent
condition. New
tires, new brakes
and rotors. 52,000
miles highway
$26,500/ best offer.
570-779-4325
570-417-2010 till 5
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid In Cash!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call V&G
Anytime
288-8995
503 Accounting/
Finance
COST/REIMBURSEMENT
ACCOUNTANT
Full time position
available at
Schuylkill Medical
Center South
Jackson Street,
Pottsville, PA.
We offer a competi-
tive salary with a
comprehensive
flexible benefits
plan. Learn more
about this position
by visiting our
website at www.
schuylkillhealth.com
Phone:
570-621-5097
Fax: 570-621-5622
E-mail: smchrsouth@
schuylkillhealth.com
EEO/AAP
506 Administrative/
Clerical
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
Full or Part Time
position available.
Knowledge of den-
tal insurances and
billing required.
Email resume to:
tzoe66@epix.net
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTERS
NEEDED
Call 570-654-5775
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
CUSTOMER SERVICE
PROFESSIONAL
Growing manufac-
turer has a position
open for a Cus-
tomer Service Pro-
fessional in a fast-
paced environment.
The ideal candidate
must possess
excellent communi-
cation skills, along
with computer
experience. Must
be a team player
with a can-do atti-
tude and have
excellent follow-up
skills. At least 3
years experience.
Comprehensive
benefit package,
including vacation,
medical, dental, and
401K.
Send resume to:
American Silk Mills
75 Stark Street
Plains, PA 18705
INDEPENDENT
INSURANCE AGENCY
Local Insurance
Agency is looking to
hire a Licensed
Commercial Lines
Customer Service
Agent to handle an
existing book of
business. At least 5
years experience is
preferred, position
is located in our
Hazleton, PA office.
Salary
commensurate with
experience, Benefit
Package includes
Health Benefits,
Life Insurance,
20 day PTO Time &
401k plan. Please
forward resume to:
Eastern
Insurance Group
Attn: Renee Valenti
613 Baltimore Drive
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18702
522 Education/
Training
CHILD CARE
Full time Pre-
School teacher
and part time Aide
available. Experi-
ence needed.
Call 570-735-9290
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTOR
Kings College
seeks a Mathemat-
ics Instructor, part-
time, non-tenure-
track, one-semes-
ter; begins January
2012. Bachelors
degree in Mathe-
matics required with
a strong teaching
background. Duties
include teaching
one or two fresh-
man level classes.
Send letter of inter-
est, CV, transcripts,
statement of teach-
ing philosophy & 3
letters of profes-
sional reference to
VP for Academic
Affairs, Kings Col-
lege, 133 N. River
St., Wilkes-Barre,
PA 18711. No elec-
tronic applications
will be accepted.
Materials must be
received by Novem-
ber 30.
Kings College is
committed to
recruiting a diverse
faculty and student
body and welcomes
applications from
persons of tradition-
ally under-repre-
sented groups. EOE
www.kings.edu
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 5D
551 Other 551 Other 551 Other
Electrical Mechanic
Full time position responsible for installing, modifying, maintaining and
repairing the Universitys wiring, electrical fixtures, apparatus, electrical
appliances, facilities, and related electronic controls and devices including
electronic door access controls and fire alarm systems. Associates degree and
5 years experience involving the installation, inspection, repair, servicing,
and maintenance of electrical equipment, machinery, and circuits are
required; equivalent combinations of education and experience may be con-
sidered. Current PA Electrical Journeyman license and valid drivers license
are required. Must be able to accommodate and prioritize emergency requests
and handle multiple responsibilities in a fast-paced setting. Computer profi-
ciency and experience with the web based building control systems, email,
and Internet are essential. Physical aspects require standing, walking, climb-
ing, balancing, stooping, kneeling, crouching, crawling, and lifting up to
100lbs.
Safety Officer
Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, providing security for per-
sons, buildings, and assets of the university; patrolling grounds and facilities;
and enforcing appropriate university regulations and policies. Candidates
must have equivalent combinations of the following education, licenses, cer-
tifications and/or experience: a high school diploma or GED; 2 years securi-
ty work experience and/or physical security and protection of assets training;
emergency services experience including fire and rescue; military and/or law
enforcement experience; experience using radio communications equipment;
law enforcement certification; Act 235 or equivalent job related certification
or the ability to complete certification within 90 days of hire. Avalid drivers
license, Act 34 clearance, and CPR and First Aid Certification (or recertifica-
tions provided after hire) are required. Physical aspects of this position
requires standing, walking, climbing, bending, stooping, kneeling, crawling,
lifting up to 25lbs, and working outside in the heat or cold weather. Must be
able to work rotating or non-traditional shifts and holidays as needed.
The work schedule for the full time position will include both 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
and 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. shifts with rotating days off.
Applications are also being accepted from qualified individuals for a pool of
Safety Officers that will provide quality staffing support of the Safety depart-
ment and will work on an as needed basis.
Please apply online at www.misericordia.edu/hr or submit a cover letter and
resume to Office of Human Resources, Misericordia University, 301 Lake
Street, Dallas, PA 18612. Misericordia University is committed to student,
faculty and staff diversity and values the educational benefit this brings to
campus. Candidates should indicate any experience and/or leadership that
contribute to this goal.
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
39 Prospect St Nanticoke
570-735-1487
WE PAY
THE MOST
INCASH
BUYING
11am
to 11pm
522 Education/
Training
TRAINING
COORDINATOR
Training Coordinator
position immediately
available in a grow-
ing, fast paced, and
successful blood
plasma collection
facility. This position
is responsible for
performing and/or
coordinating the
training of Source
Plasma Center per-
sonnel and monitor-
ing the effective-
ness of that training.
This position
requires and individ-
ual with a bachelors
degree, preferable
in education or
training develop-
ment or equivalent
work experience,
excellent interper-
sonal, communica-
tion, training skills,
problem solving,
and must be highly
motivated.
Fax Resume to 570-
823-7366 or E-mail:
apanzarella@inter
statebloodbank.com
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
COOPERS SEAFOOD
WATERFRONT
Now Hiring
Experienced
Line Cooks. Good
working conditions,
medical benefits,
paid vacations, uni-
forms. Apply in per-
son. 304 Kennedy
Blvd., Pittston
LINE COOK
Full time position
available.
Pazzo Restaurant
Call 602-4400
Ask for Sam
THE WOODLANDS
PIZZA CHEF
Full Time Evenings
Experience
necessary
HOUSEPERSON
Full Time days
Weekends required
Benefits include
paid vacation,
health, dental and
401K.
Apply in person
1073 Highway 315,
Wilkes-Barre
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVERS
Class A CDL drivers
needed. Dedicated
routes. Must have
clean MVR; doubles
endorsement.
Home every day, off
weekends. Full time
local work. One year
experience needed.
Call Todd
570-991-0316
GENERAL
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS
West Side, semi re-
tired & home mak-
ers welcome, will
train. 570-288-8035
542 Logistics/
Transportation
NOW HIRING:
CLASS A OTR
COMPANY DRIVERS
Van Hoekelen
Greenhouses is a
family owned busi-
ness located in
McAdoo, PA.
We have immedi-
ate openings for
reliable full-time
tractor trailer driv-
ers, to deliver prod-
uct to our cus-
tomers across the
48 states. Our pre-
mier employment
package includes:
Hourly Pay-
including paid
detention time, and
guaranteed
8 hours per day
Safety Bonus-
$.05/mile paid
quarterly
Great Benefits-
100% paid health
insurance, vision,
dental, life, STD,
401K, vacation
time, and holiday
pay.
Pet & Rider
Program
Well maintained
freightliners and
reefer trailers
Continuous year-
round steady work
with home time
Requirements are:
Valid Class A CDL,
minimum 1 year
OTR experience,
must lift 40lbs, and
meet driving and
criminal record
guidelines
PLEASE
CONTACT
SHARON AT
(800)979-2022
EXT 1914,
MAIL RESUME TO
P.O. BOX 88,
MCADOO, PA
18237 OR FAX TO
570-929-2260.
VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT
WWW.VHGREEN
HOUSES.COM
FOR MORE
DETAILS.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DRIVERS NEEDED:
Maxum
Petroleum is
currently seeking
Transport
Drivers
(CDL Class A)
with Hazmat and
Tanker for our
Scranton, PA
location. Not an
over the road
trucking company.
We offer a full
benefit package
available the first
of the month fol-
lowing 30 days of
employment
including 401K
company match.
We offer DOT
roadside and
annual achievable
safety bonus pro-
grams based on
your safety per-
formance. Paid
holidays, sick
days and vacation
days are provided
as well. EOE
Requirements:
Class A Commer-
cial Drivers
License, HAZMAT
& Tanker
endorsements,
Must have two
years verifiable
experience and
clean driving
record, Positive
Attitude/Willing to
Work
Apply online at
http://www.
maxumpetroleum.
com/careers.aspx
548 Medical/Health
Village at
Greenbriar
Assisted
Living
PERSONAL CARE
AIDES - PART TIME
All Shifts
COOK - PART TIME
ACTIVITY AIDE -
PART TIME
APPLY WITHIN:
4252 Memorial
Highway
Dallas, PA 18612
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
551 Other
Is now hiring
MEAT CUTTERS
Good salary and
benefits. Experi-
ence required.
Apply at
www.gerritys.com
or 2020 Wyoming
Ave., Wyoming
GENERAL LABOR
Several 1st shift
receiving posi-
tions in Hazleton
area. Positions
are temp to hire.
Pay rate $10.00
per hour. Must
own steel toe
boots and be able
to read, write,
add/subtract.
Call ADECCO
today at
570.451.3726
for immediate
consideration.
554 Production/
Operations
MACHINE SHOP
SUPERVISOR WANTED
Looking for a
HANDS ON supervi-
sor/setup person
for our production
drilling and tapping
department. The
candidate should
be familiar with the
setup and operation
of multi-head drilling
and tapping units
and also dedicated
drilling and tapping
centers. 401k and
health benefits.
Apply in person:
Bardane
Manufacturing Co.,
301 Delaware St.
Jermyn, PA 18433
560 Quality
Assurance/Safety
MACHINE SHOP
INSPECTOR WANTED
Experienced Quality
Control Inspector
wanted for CNC
machined castings.
Must be able to do
visual inspections,
read blueprints, use
micrometers and
gages. We will train
an applicant with a
machinist back-
ground. 401k and
health benefits.
Apply in person:
Bardane
Manufacturing Co.,
301 Delaware St.
Jermyn, PA 18433
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
SALES REPS
Experience in elec-
trical field helpful
but not necessary.
Call 570-992-9906
or email resume to
heeter2@ptd.net
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
JAN-PRO
Commercial Cleaning
Of Northeastern PA
Concerned about
your future?
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Work Full or Part
time. Accounts
available NOW
throughout Luzerne
& Lackawanna
counties. We guar-
antee $5,000 to
$200,000 in annual
billing. Investment
Required. Were
ready are you?
For more info call
570-824-5774
Jan-Pro.com
KINGSTONS
CHILDRENS BOUTIQUE
FOR SALE
TURN KEY
BUSINESS
570-714-2229
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LIQUOR LICENSE
LUZERNE COUNTY
$25,000
215-595-8747
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
DOLLS, Cabbage
Patch: (1) 1984 doll,
$40. (3) 1985 dolls,
$40 each. (1) 1985
Limited Edition Twin
doll set, $65. All are
in original boxes
570-574-4631
710 Appliances
A P P L I A N C E
PA R T S E T C .
Used appliances.
Parts for all brands.
223 George Ave.
Wilkes-Barre
570-820-8162
REFRIGERATOR
with auto icemaker.
Works great. $100.
570-301-2413
RETIRED REPAIRMAN
Top loading
Whirlpool & Ken-
more Washers, Gas
& Electric Dryers.
570-833-2965
570-460-0658
ROTISSERIE
large Super Show-
time, rarely used/
like new. $130 obo
570-430-2338
SANDWICH MAKER,
new, recipe book,
never used $8. 18
quart roaster oven,
new in box $50.
570-815-6772
STOVE, Frigidaire,
42, electric. Large
oven with small side
oven. 4 burner.
Bisque color. Excel-
lent condition. $250.
570-237-5386
710 Appliances
Why Spend
Hundreds on
New or Used
Appliances?
Most problems
with your appli-
ances are usually
simple and inex-
pensive to fix!
Save your hard
earned money, Let
us take a look at it
first!
30 years in
the business.
East Main
Appliances
570-735-8271
Nanticoke
712 Baby Items
BABY clothes 12
months box boy
$12. Box of infant
toddler 6 months-1
1/2 year $15.
570-815-6772
BABY SWING,
Cosco, almost new,
$30. 570-793-9296
CLOTHES Baby girl
from newborn to 2t,
many great pieces
to choose from, $1.
each. Boppy
portable swing, soft
brown with pink
accents $15. Crib
mattress, like new,
$15. Adjustable high
chair, infant to tod-
dler, tan, $20. Pink
bouncer chair with
music $10. Eddie
Bauer grey plaid
playpen with match-
ing infant carseat
$20. 570-899-2305
CRIB F.P. 3 In 1 trav-
el tender crib $20.
570-654-4113
DOUBLE STROLLER:
By Graco. Light
green with
canopies, trays,
storage. Like new
$30. 570-855-9221
714 Bridal Items
WEDDING DRESS,
White with black in
dress, includes veil.
Never worn. $500.
570-406-5876
WEDDING package:
all home made with
pears & sequins, pil-
low babushka,
apron & money bag.
$75. 570-654-6283
716 Building
Materials
FLOOD CONTROL
USED CONCRETE
BARRIERS FOR SALE
Available for pick up
in Clarks Summit
12x52 $10/l.f.
12x34 $8/l.f.
20x34 $12/l.f.
Delivery Available @
$100 per hour.
Grabber Rental
Fee $400
570-586-2145
HOT WATER Heater,
30 gallon, used 6
months, very good
condition, $100.
570-468-3052
RAILING new, solid
wrought iron, two
10 x 26 plus 4
matching gates,
includes hardware
$195. 822-1227
720 Cemetery
Plots/Lots
MEMORIAL SHRINE
CEMETERY
6 Plots Available
May be Separated
Rose Lawn Section
$450 each
570-654-1596
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
MEMORIAL SHRINE
LOTS FOR SALE
6 lots available at
Memorial Shrine
Cemetery. $2,400.
Call 717-774-1520
SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY
722 Christmas
Trees
CHRISTMAS TREE
Pre-lit slim 6 high
with gold ornaments
$100. 570-693-3111
726 Clothing
GARAGE SALE
LEFTOVERS
40 + pairs size 6
shoes, sandals, &
boots, very stylish-
many with heels.
$30. for all. 1 pair
sIze 7/2W Stefanie
Softspots paid $47.
sell for $10. 3 pair
size 8W Softspots,
Softwalk, & Cobbie
Cuddlers $5. each.
1 pair 7 1/2W Cobbie
Cuddlers $3. 4 pair
size 8 1/2 M Maripe
loafer, Markon san-
dal, & 2 short boots
Bass & Jenecat $3.
570-288-1505
JACKET, Leather,
brown, XL, New,
$75. 570-468-3052
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
LAPTOP Gateway
MX6025 windows
xp. cardreader, dvd
rom/cdrw. case,
adapter included.
$165 Dell Inspiron
1300 laptop win-
dows 7. 1gb ram
dvdrom/cdrw. case,
adapter included.
$190. 905-2985
732 Exercise
Equipment
HOME GYM. Excel-
lent condition Wei-
der pro 9940 in-
cludes ab station,
butterfly arms,
weights, chest
pads, leg pulls &
more, black leather
trim $300 obo
570-262-7923
738 Floor Care
Equipment
VACUUM: Electrolux
Oxygen tank
sweeper all attach-
ments like new
$250. Hoover Floor
cleaner like new
$150.
570-655-8272
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEATER: Amish, oak
cabinet, remote,
used last year, like
new $250.
570-654-6283
HEATERS: Vent Free
propane & natural
gas, can be mount-
ed on wall or floor,
thermostat & blow-
er Full manufacturer
warranty 20,000 btu
$190. 30,000 btu -
$220. 675-0005
744 Furniture &
Accessories
ARMOIRE. Beautiful
Cherry, crown mold-
ing. Fold in doors,
storage below.
Includes Sony 35
TV works GREAT.
$400 for both.
44x75x23
570-262-8282
570-735-8558
BED
THOMAS THE
TRAIN
$100. 570-868-3411
BOX SPRING:
Queen size box
spring 5 years old.
Good condition
$60. 570-814-2887
CABINET wall unit 3
piece oak, 9wx78h
with glass & panel
doors, shelves
$500. 570-693-3111
DESKS: 5 total,
wooden. $50-$100
each; METAL FILE
CABINETS, different
sizes $50-$150;
Office waiting room
padded chairs $15;
Metal Office Coat
Hanger $25. Call
570-239-8206
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
DINING ROOM
TABLE, with 6 chairs
and matching china
cabinet, 1930s, light
wood, $350.
Mahogany dining
room table, $150.
Call (570) 793-9296
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, oak, 46 h,
40w. Will hold up to
26 TV, has drawers
& shelves, excellent
condition. $50.
570-696-1703
FURNI SH FURNI SH
FOR LESS FOR LESS
* NELSON *
* FURNITURE *
* WAREHOUSE *
Recliners from $299
Lift Chairs from $699
New and Used
Living Room
Dinettes, Bedroom
210 Division St
Kingston
Call 570-288-3607
FURNI TURE: Bas-
sett Maple chest of
drawers, Good con-
dition. $75. Bassett
Maple dresser with
mirror, Good condi-
tion. $75. Maple
desk with chair,
Good condition.
$50. Green painted
Jelly Cupboard $75.
Sofabed blue &
beige $75.
570-239-8795
KITCHEN SET, table
and 5 chairs, wood,
$65. COUCH, $25.
All items very good
condition.
(570) 468-3052
AFFORDABLE
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $159
Full sets: $179
Queen sets: $199
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
SECTIONAL 5 piece
soft brown including
2 recliner pieces,
sofa bed piece.
Seats 7, sleeps 2.
Very Good condi-
tion. $495.
570-331-3575
SUNROOM FURNI-
TURE glass top rat-
tan table with 4
chairs. 2 swivel rat-
tan chairs with end
table & another
matching glass top
rattan table. $300
570-466-5115
BUYING
US/FOREIGN/
CANADIAN
COINS &
CURRENCY
Paying
Highest
Coin Dealer Prices
Silver Dollars
All Gold Coins
Better Coins
& Collections
Top Dollar for
all US & Foreign
Silver Coins.
Proof Sets
Indian Head &
Wheat backs
Tokens &
medals
Bullion pieces
Sterling Silver
& Gold Jewelry
Local Postcards
& Advertising
Stamps
Vintage Toys &
Lead Soldiers
We give FREE
appraisals!
Over 35 years,
a respected
coin dealer.
HERITAGE
GALLERIES
DALLAS, PA
Across from
Dallas Agway
on Rt. 415
Look for blue
& white signs
TUES-FRI, 10-6
SAT, 10-5
570-674-2646
750 Jewelry
DIAMOND
Engagement Ring.
Large center stone,
multiple small
stones. Lifetime
warranty from-
Littmans. Pur-
chased for $2100
selling for $1500
Can go and verify
at local jewelers.
White gold
570-606-3523
Too many baby
toys?
Pass them on, sell
them with an ad!
570-829-7130
ENGAGEMENT RING
1 Carat Princess Cut
with trillion side dia-
monds. Paid $3,400
at Steve Hydocks,
willing to sacrifice at
$1,200. VVS2 Clarity.
F color. Set in 14K
yellow gold. Call
570-328-4109 or
570-823-1774
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
FIELDSTONE WALL,
FREE, 40 x 3. You
remove & reshape
small hill beneath.
570-696-1853
Evenings
Patrick & Debs
Lawn Care
See our ad under
Call An Expert
1162 Landscape &
Garden
754 Machinery &
Equipment
PALLET JACKS:
Eco-lift individual
pallet jacks (2),
5500lb, 3 position.
Each $225.00
Kobalt steel wheel-
barrow $50.00 2
platform trucks,
heavy capacity
48lx24w. Each
$50.00
570-899-2305
SNOWBLOWER
ATTACHMENT 42
for the FASTATTACH
lawn tractor
includes chains &
weights cost $1100.
sell for $250. Used
one season.
570-563-3081
756 Medical
Equipment
BATHTUB TRANS-
FER CHAIR, padded,
with suction feet.
$50. 570-824-7015
DYNEX II NEU-
ROSTIMULATOR
(TENS unit) including
all necessary equip-
ment $150.829-1611
758 Miscellaneous
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
AUTO PAINT BASE
COAT, 1 gallon 6M
rally red Corvette
color sell for $100.
obo. 570-883-7007`
BIRD CAGE, 18w x
18 d x 24 h, $25.
Miniature Trucks,
4 match box collect-
ables trucks, $35.
Planter, 2 piece
syrocco, $25.
Christmas Village,
13 pieces plus
accessories, $99.
570-288-5628
COOK BOOKS
assorted, moving
must sell $10. 2 mir-
rors for dressers
$40. 570-313-5213
PICNIC TABLE, blue,
folding, 33x25 top.
Great for camping.
$15. Three 2 x 4 flu-
orescent lights/ lens
& 6 wire whip $10.
each
570-696-3528
758 Miscellaneous
DVD PLAYER
Insignia $20. (2) 8
mm movie projec-
tors reg & super 8
GAF 138 $40. Chi-
non 3000GL $40.
Ionic pro air purifier
$25. 3 fluorescent
fixtures & 30 watt
bulb $24. 35 mm
Cannon zoom
supershot $25.
Handyman Maga-
zines .20 cents
each. American
Standard shower
head $5. VHS tapes
43. VHS tapes T120
$5. 570-825-5564
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private party
merchandise only
for items totaling
$1,000 or less. All
items must be
priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No ads
for ticket sales
accepted. Pet ads
accepted if FREE
ad must state
FREE.
One Submission per
month per
household.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA. Sorry
no phone calls.
SNOW BLOWER,
Snapper, gas pow-
ered 17 $200.
Homelite chain saw
16 bar, gas pow-
ered with case $75.
Antique Armoire
cabinet $100. Chevy
Tailgate 88-98 full
size pickup $75.
Coke Cola 1950s
cooler $150. Holley
600 cfm double
pumper carburator
rebuilt $150. Fiber-
glass Hood with
scoop 82-94 Chevy
S10 pickup & blazer
$200.
570-655-3197
762 Musical
Instruments
GUITARS Fender
Squier Strat with gig
bag $149. Ibanez
Acoustic & case,
needs work, $59.
PEDALS Vintage
Ross Distortion $89,
Fender Starcaster
Chorus $35, UNI-
VOX UniWah wah
wah $89, Ampeg
Scrambler Clone
$89. 283-2552 rick
@ wyomingvalley.net
KNABE BABY
GRAND PI ANO
(51) with bench
seat. Mahogany tra-
ditional style. Made
in Baltimore, MD in
1944. Same owner
since 1968. Tuned in
September. $3200.
570-696-9818
PIANO Baldwin light
finish, excellent con-
dition $1000.
570-817-1425
PIANO. Wurlitzer
upright, good condi-
tion, needs tuning.
$650. Call after 5:00
570-283-0535
PIANO: Baldwin
Acrosonic Upright
Console Piano Good
Condition $600.
570-239-8795
770 Photo
Equipment
DIGITAL CAMERA
HP PhotoSmart 7.2
Megapixel with SD
card, spare battery
& charger. $65.
283-2552 or rick@
wyomingvalley.net
774 Restaurant
Equipment
DELI CART, Com-
mercial, $190. BAR
NEONS, (1) Corona,
(1) Miller Lite & (1)
Blue Moon $150/
each. TABLES, two
restaurant dining,
$75/each. CHAIRS,
8, $20/each. Prices
negotiable, $990.
for all. 570-574-5119
776 Sporting Goods
ANTIQUE POOL
TABLE excellent
condition with all
accessories $800.
or best offer
570-208-3888
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
BIKE: Diamondback
Wildwood womens
comfort bike. Excel-
lent condition. $150.
570-855-2568
GOLF CLUBS set
Generic, great con-
dition $50.815-6772
HUNTING COAT
Woolrich new, large,
2 pairs X large. Deer
calls, all new Lists
$350 selling $60.
570-287-2073
POOL TABLE, two,
regulation size,
slate, disassem-
bled, $200/each.
POOL STICKS, balls,
etc, full set, $40.
570-215-0215
SKIS, Rossignol
Rebel 177, Salomon
series 7 bindings.
$75 SKI BOOTS,
Salomon Optime 8.1
Exp. Mens size 8
$30 SKI POLES $5.
570-287-1025
TRAINING NET, soc-
cer/golf, 6 x 10 x 6
$10. 570-696-3528
TRICYCLE adult by
Miami Sun. $225.
570-239-6586
778 Stereos/
Accessories
TWEETER MOD-
ULES(2EA.) CSX-
DT4 & CSX-DT8
MADE BY ORION
CONNECTION,USED
CONDITION BOTH
FOR $5.00
(570)735-6638
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TV 35 Sony Trini-
tron with matching
black swivel stand.
$60. 570-466-5115
TV Sony 40 LCD ,
like new. 1080p.
High Definition.
$400. 833-2598
784 Tools
CIRCULAR SAW, 7
1/4 Craftsman $25.
universal battery,
fast charge $10.
570-825-5564
ROLLING SCAF-
FOLD, excellent
condition 8ho 6l
x2w $300. All size
pipe & straight
taps, all size drill bits
$1-10.570-735-5290
786 Toys & Games
BARBIE DOLLS
Older & newer in
boxes, new $7. to
$25. 570-654-4113
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
TV, Toshiba 13,
color, $25. Sony
handicam HI 8 cam-
corder with acces-
sories, $150.
570-288-5628
794 Video Game
Systems/Games
ATARI comes with
31 games, $25.
(570) 288-5628
MODERN WARFARE 3
Call of Duty: Modern
Warfare 3. I pur-
chased three days
ago and already fin-
ished the game.
$50. Call or text.
570-814-3383
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
NEED CASH?
We Buy:
Gold & Gold coins,
Silver, Platinum,
old bills, Watches,
Old Costume Jew-
elry, Diamonds,
Gold Filled, Ster-
ling Silver Flat-
ware, Scrap Jew-
elry, Military items,
old Tin & Iron
Toys, Canadian
coins & paper
money, most for-
eign money
(paper/coin).
PAYING TOP DOLLAR
FOR GOLD & SILVER
COINS FROM VERY
GOOD, VERY FINE &
UNCIRCULATED.
Visit our new loca-
tion @ 134 Rt. 11,
Larksville
next to WOODYS
FIRE PLACE
& PRO FIX.
We make house calls!
Buyer & seller of
antiques! We also
do upholstering.
570-855-7197
570-328-3428
The Vi deo
Game St or e
28 S. Main W.B.
Open Mon- Sat,
12pm 6pm
570-822-9929 /
570-941-9908
$$ CASH PAID $$
VI DE O GAME S &
S YS TE MS
Highest $$ Paid
Guaranteed
Buying all video
games &
systems. PS1 & 2,
Xbox, Nintendo,
Atari, Coleco,
Sega, Mattel,
Gameboy,
Vectrex etc.
DVDs, VHS & CDs
& Pre 90s toys,
The Video
Game Store
1150 S. Main
Scranton
Mon - Sat,
12pm 6pm
570-822-9929
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE
PICKUP
288-8995
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 48GOLD8
( 570) 484- 6538
Highest Cash Pay
Outs Guaranteed
Mon- Sat
10am - 6pm
Cl osed Sundays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd
( Pl aza 315)
315N . 3 mi l es af t er
Mot orworl d
We Pay At Least
80% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
Visit us at
WilkesBarreGold.com
Or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
London PM
Gold Price
Nov. 14: $1,776.00
800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
CAT/FREE. 5 years
old, white with
orange spots,
declawed, spayed.
570-704-8120
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
815 Dogs
PAWS
TO CONSIDER....
ENHANCE
YOUR PET
CLASSIFIED
AD ONLINE
Call 829-7130
Place your pet ad
and provide us your
email address
This will create a
seller account
online and login
information will be
emailed to you from
gadzoo.com
The World of Pets
Unleashed
You can then use
your account to
enhance your online
ad. Post up to 6
captioned photos
of your pet
Expand your text to
include more
information, include
your contact
information such
as e-mail, address
phone number and
or website.
COCKAPOO pups.
Black, well social-
ized. Shots are cur-
rent. $150 each.
570-765-1846
DACHSI-PINS
Miniature puppies,
7 weeks old, two
copper short haired
female, 2 copper
short haired male, 1
black and tan short-
haired female.
Shots, dewormed,
frontlined. $400.
570-288-1029
GERMAN SHEPHERD
Purebred Male. Black
and Tan. 13 months
old, housebroken,
crate-trained, friend-
ly, good watch dog.
$125. Call
570-301-2694
LAB RETRIEVER PUPS!
8 weeks old. Ready
to go. 2 females, 1
yellow, 1 black. $300
570-357-2719
LABRADOR RETRIEVER
Pups. Black, ACA
registered, shots
and wormed, male
and female. $300.
570-556-0357
Morkie pups,
Malti-poo pups
Health records,
love people, toy
size maturity.
$300 each
570-765-0936
POMERANIAN PUPPIES
Parents on premises
Shots Current. $500
570-401-1838
ROTTWEILER PUPS
German lines.
2 females. Ready to
go. $450.
570-592-5515
570-654-0678
St. Bernard, Poms,
Yorkies, Maltese,
Husky, Rotties,
Doberman, Golden,
Dachshund, Poodle,
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
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746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
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Need a Roommate?
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find one here!
570-829-7130
PAGE 6D TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
815 Dogs
SHIH TZU PUPPIES
2 females. First
shots & Vet
checked.
570-654-6730
570-881-3117
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900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
Having trouble
paying your mort-
gage? Falling
behind on your
payments? You
may get mail from
people who promise
to forestall your
foreclosure for a fee
in advance. Report
them to the Federal
Trade Commission,
the nations con-
sumer protection
agency. Call 1-877-
FTC-HELP or click
on ftc.gov. A mes-
sage from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
ASHLEY
3 bedroom, 1 bath 2
story in good loca-
tion. Fenced yard
with 2 car detached
garage. Large attic
for storage. Gas
heat. $79,900
Call Ruth Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
ASHLEY
Not in Flood Zone
77 Cook Street
2 or 3 bedroom Sin-
gle Home for Sale.
Off street parking.
Large yard.
$82,000
Negotiable
(570) 814-4730
AVOCA
314 Packer St.
Remodeled 3 bed-
room with 2 baths,
master bedroom
and laundry on 1st
floor. New siding
and shingles. New
kitchen. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3174
$99,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
AVOCA
FOR SALE BY OWNER.
Very nice split level
home. 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths with
over-sized jacuzzi.
Living room with
fireplace. Kitchen
with dining area,
family room, rec
room with pool
table. Garage with
opener. Central air.
3 season sun room,
deck, large fenced
lot with shed. In
great neighborhood.
$189,900
(570) 540-0157
BEAR CREEK
475 East Ave.
Top to bottom re-do
for this beautiful 3
bedroom, 1.75 bath,
2 story home locat-
ed in the Meadow
Run Lake communi-
ty of Bear Creek.
Tranquil setting,
modern interior all
re-done, granite
countertops in the
kitchen, exterior
with new landscap-
ing and stone patio
with lake frontage
to name a few!
MLS 11-1643
$329,900
Call Jay A.
Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
BEAR CREEK
601 Sandspring Dr
true log home on 4
acres of privacy.
built with care &
quality! features
include 2 master
suites with walk-in
closets. Each Mst
Bath has a jacuzzi &
shower. Graced
with Custom River
Stone Fireplace,
exposed beams &
real hardwood
floors. A wall of win-
dows to enjoy the
outdoor vista's.
Large Family room
on 1st floor & Large
recreation room
lower level. Ideal for
entertaining family &
friends. This home
has 4 full baths. 2
Covered Porches to
relax on a porch
swing or enjoy the
sunny rear deck
overlooking the
wooded land. Cus-
tom Kitchen with
GRANITE counter
tops, HICKORY
Cabinets & of
course Stainless
Steel appliances.
MLS 11-7410
$399,900
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
BEAR CREEK
Meadow Run Road
Enjoy the exclusive
privacy of this 61
acre, 3 bedroom, 2
bath home with
vaulted ceilings and
open floor plan. Ele-
gant formal living
room, large airy
family room and
dining room and
gorgeous 3 season
room opening to
large deck with hot
tub. Modern eat in
kitchen with island,
gas fireplace,
upstairs and wood
burning stove
downstairs. This
stunning property
boasts a relaxing
pond and walking
trail. Sit back
and savor
the view
MLS 11-3462
$443,900
Sandy Rovinski
Ext. 26
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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BLAKESLEE
47 Scenic Drive
Country Colonial,
hilltop setting. Living
room/den with fire-
place. Large kitchen
/ great room. Family
room with large win-
dows on every wall.
Covered wrap-
around porch. Full
basement. 3 car
garage. 11-4498
$259,627
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
CENTERMORELAND
Wyoming County
Home with 30 Acres
This country estate
features 30 acres of
prime land with a
pretty home, ultra
modern kitchen, 2
full modern baths,
bright family room,
den, living room and
3 good sized bed-
rooms. This proper-
ty has open fields
and wooded land, a
stream, several
fieldstone walls and
lots of road
frontage. Equipment
and rights included.
$489,000. 11-3751
Call Jerry Bush Jr.
Coldwell Banker
Gerald L. Busch
Real Estate
570-288-2514
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
1360 Lower
Demunds Rd.
A grand entrance
leads you to this
stunning Craftsman
style home on 11+
acres complete with
pond, stream &
rolling meadows.
This dramatic home
is in pristine condi-
tion. The 2 story
great room with
stone fireplace &
warm wood walls is
one of the focal
points of this home.
Offers modern
kitchen/baths, for-
mal dining room &
family room.
Recently built 3 car
garage with guest
quarters above is a
plus. Youll spend
many hours on the
large wrap around
porch this Fall,
Spring & Summer
overlooking your
estate. Rarely does
a home like this
come on the mar-
ket. MLS# 11-1741.
$499,000
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
DALLAS
138 White Birch Ln
Charming two story
on nice lot features,
living room, dining
room with hard-
woods, modern Oak
kitchen, first floor
family room, 4 large
bedrooms, 2 full & 2
half baths. Deck
overlooking level
rear yard. 2 car
garage. Gas heat,
Central air. (11-3115)
$318,000
Call Kevin Smith
570-696-5422
SMITH HOURIGAN
570-696-1195
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new apartment?
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DALLAS
23 Rice Court
If you've reached
the top, live there in
this stunning 3,900
sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 4
bath home in a
great neighborhood.
Offers formal living
room, dining room,
2 family rooms, flori-
da room, and
kitchen any true
chef would adore.
Picture perfect con-
dition. The base-
ment is heated by a
separate system.
SELLER PROVIDING
HOME WARRANTY.
MLS#11-1005
$349,900
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
DALLAS
248 Overbrook Rd.
Lovely 4 bedroom
cape cod situated
in a private setting
on a large lot.
Vaulted ceiling in
dining room, large
walk in closet in 1
bedroom on 2nd
floor. Some
replacement win-
dows. Call Today!
MLS 11-2733
$125,000
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
DALLAS
400 Shrine View
Elegant & classic
stone & wood
frame traditional in
superb location
overlooking adja-
cent Irem Temple
Country Club golf
course. Living room
with beamed ceiling
& fireplace; large
formal dining room;
cherry paneled sun-
room; 4 bedrooms
with 3 full baths &
2 powder rooms.
Oversized in-ground
pool. Paved,
circular drive.
$550,000
MLS# 11-939
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
DUPONT
167 Center St.
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath
2 story home with
garage and drive-
way. Newer kitchen
and bath. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3561
Price reduced
$64,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DUPONT
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Single family home
with a separate
building containing
a 1 bedroom apart-
ment and 5 car
garage all on 1 lot.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2828
Price reduced
$82,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
548 ADAMS ST.
Charming, well
maintained 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home
located on a quiet
street near Blue-
berry Hills develop-
ment. Features
modern kitchen
with breakfast bar,
formal dining room,
family room with
gas stove, hard-
wood floors in bed-
rooms, deck,
fenced yard and
shed. MLS#11-2947
$107,500
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
DURYEA
548 Green St.
Are you renting??
The monthly mort-
gage on this house
could be under
$500 for qualified
buyers. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, 1st
floor laundry. Off
street parking,
deep lot, low taxes.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3983
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
DURYEA
619 Foote Ave.
Dont judge a book
by its cover! This is
a must see Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, 1 3/4 baths,
1 car garage, large
yard, finished lower
level. New kitchen
with heated tile
floors, granite
counter, stainless
appliances. Split
system A/C, gas
hot water base-
board. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-4079
$159,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
805-807 Main
St.
Multi-Family.
Large side by
side double with
separate utili-
ties. 3 bed-
rooms each side
with newer car-
pet, replace-
ment windows
and newer roof.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3054
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
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906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
Blueberry Hill.
3 bedroom ranch.
Large lot with pool.
$339,500
No Realtors
For more details
call 570-406-1128
DURYEA
BLUEBERRY HILLS
108 Blackberry Ln.
Newer construc-
tion, 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths, family
room with gas fire-
place. Formal dining
room. 2 car garage,
gas heat, large
deck, above ground
pool. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3858
$289,900
Call Lu-Ann
570-602-9280
DURYEA
NOT IN FLOOD ZONE
319 Bennett Street
For Sale by Owner
Two story, 2-unit
home. Live in one
unit rent the other
to pay mortgage or
great investment
property. Small
fenced-in yard and
detached garage.
$65,000 Negotiable
Call Tara
570-430-1962
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DURYEA
Not in Flood Zone
Single family house,
2 bedrooms, 2
bathrooms, oil heat,
unfinished base-
ment, small yard,
$35,000
Call 570-457-3340
DURYEA
PRICE REDUCED!
314 Bennett Street
Refashioned 3 or 4
bedroom, two full
modern baths. Two
story, 2300sf, with
level yard with love-
ly new landscaping
and 1 car garage.
New EVERYTHING
in this charming
must see property.
Custom blinds
throughout the
home. Great neigh-
borhood with Park
beyond the back-
yard. MLS# 11-3776
$164,900
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
DURYEA
REDUCED
1140 SPRING ST.
Large 3 bedroom
home with new
roof, replacement
windows, hardwood
floors. Great loca-
tion! For more infor-
mation and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2636
$99,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
DURYEA
REDUCED
411 JONES ST.
Beautiful 2 story
English Tudor
with exquisite
gardens, sur-
rounding beauti-
ful in ground
pool, private
fenced yard
with a home
with too many
amenities to list.
Enjoy the sum-
mer here!
Screened in
porch and foyer
that just adds to
the great living
space
of the home
For more info
and photos:
visit:www.
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
MLS 11-2720
$229,900
Call Phil
570-313-1229
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
REDUCED!
38 Huckleberry
Lane
Blueberry Hills
4 BEDROOMS, 2.5
baths, family room
with fireplace, 2 car
garage, large yard.
Master bath with
separate jetted tub,
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances and island,
lighted deck. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3071
$319,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
EDWARDSVILLE
32 Atlantic Ave
3 bedroom. Great
starter home.
Almost completely
remodeled. 11-2108
$87,000
Darcy J. Gollhardt,
Realtor
570-262-0226
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-718-4959
Ext. 1352
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EDWARDSVILLE
9 Williams St.
Large 4 bedroom
home with nice rear
deck, replacement
windows, off street
parking. Possible
apartment in sepa-
rate entrance.
Loads of potential.
For more info and
pictures visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2091
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
EXETER
908 Primrose Court
Move right into this
newer 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath Townhome
with many
upgrades including
hardwood floors
throughout and tiled
bathrooms. Lovely
oak cabinets in the
kitchen, central air,
fenced in yard, nice
quiet neighborhood.
MLS 11-2446
$123,000
Call Don Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
EXETER
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
362 Susquehanna
Ave
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms and 1.5
baths, new rear
deck, full front
porch, tiled baths
and kitchen, granite
countertops, all
Cherry hardwood
floors throughout,
all new stainless
steel appliances
and lighting, new oil
furnace, washer
dryer in first floor
bath. Great neigh-
borhood, nice yard.
$174,900 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$887/month, 30
years @ 4.5%)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
REDUCED
128 JEAN ST.
Nice bi-level home
on quiet street.
Updated exterior.
Large family room,
extra deep lot. 2
car garage,
enclosed rear
porch and covered
patio. For more
information and
photos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-2850
$184,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
EXETER
REDUCED
908 Primrose Court
Move right into this
newer 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath Townhome
with many
upgrades including
hardwood floors
throughout and tiled
bathrooms. Lovely
oak cabinets in the
kitchen, central air,
fenced in yard, nice
quiet neighborhood.
MLS 11-2446
$119,900
Call Don Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
FACTORYVILLE
Major renovations,
updates, spacious,
landscaped,
enclosed porch and
patio, 4 bed-
rooms.Gorgeous.
Charming inside
and out on half
acre. Exceptional
buy at $180,900
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
FORTY FORT
70 Wesley Street
Very nice, move-in
condition or good
rental property. 1.5
double, 3 bedroom,
living room, kitchen,
dining room, base-
ment & full attic.
Great deal, must
sell, only $30,000.
Call (570) 762-5119
FORTY FORT
REDUCED!
1301 Murray St.
Very nice duplex,
fully rented with
good return in great
neighborhood. For
more information
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2149
$124,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
FRANKLIN TWP.
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Chalet style split
level in country set-
ting. 3 bedrooms,
den with wood
burning fireplace,
living room, dining
room, kitchen &
family room. Fin-
ished basement. 1
car attached
garage. Must see!
$189,900
Call (570) 333-4987
Line up a place to live
in classified!
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
65-67 St. Marys Rd
Double Block close
to Marion Terrace
Elementary. 3 bed-
rooms each unit.
Nice private yard.
Buyers Agent must
be present at first
showing in order to
claim commission.
MLS 11-2426.
$65,000
Call Connie
Eileen R. Melone
Real Estate
570-821-7022
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Reduced!
Bi-Level. 1,750 sq ft.
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, 1 car garage.
New carpeting,
paint, etc. Large lot.
Asking $99,900.
Deremer Realty
570-477-1149
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
This home says
come in! Youll feel
right at home the
moment you step
inside. 3 large bed-
rooms, 2 modern
baths, modern
kitchen, living room,
dining room with
hardwood floors,
office, laundry room,
comfortable gas
heat, cool central air
and 2 car garage.
You have to see the
patio! MLS 11-2487
$235,000
Call Jerry Bush Jr.
Coldwell Banker
Gerald L. Busch
Real Estate
570-288-2514
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
HANOVER TWP
187 South Street
3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, modern
kitchen, security
system, beautifully
landscaped patio,
pond & above
ground pool are just
a few of the touch-
es that make this
home so appealing.
Great neighbor-
hood! Close to
major highways.
MLS #11-2370
$129,000
Call Debra at
570-714-9251
HANOVER TWP
710 Church Street
Exceptionally well
care for home in
move in condition.
Everything is new,
roof, siding, win-
dows, porches,
kitchen and baths.
MLS 11-2309
$119,000
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
HANOVER TWP.
209 Constitution
Avenue, LIBERTY HILLS
Fantastic view from
the deck and patio
of this 4 bedroom,
2.5 bath vinyl sided
2 story home. Four
years young with so
many extras. A
dream home!
MLS# 11-2429
$299,900
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
5 Raymond Drive
Practically new 8
year old Bi-level
with 4 bedrooms, 1
and 3/4 baths,
garage, fenced
yard, private dead
end street. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3422
$179,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HANOVER TWP.
8 Diamond Ave.
Dont worry
about winter in
this fully insulat-
ed home with
new windows. 3
floors of living
space lets you
spread out and
enjoy this
house. Large
family room
addition plus 4
bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths, 1st floor
laundry, large
corner lot. Mod-
ern kitchen with
granite coun-
ters. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-622
$119,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
P
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906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
KORN KREST
322 Spring Street
Out of the flood
area. 2 family
home. One with 2
bedrooms, the
other with 3 bed-
rooms. Needs TLC.
50x125ft lot. Walk-
ing distance to
schools grade 7-12,
kindergarten & 1st.
$49,000.
Kwiatkowski Real Estate
570-825-7988
HANOVER TWP.
2 story in good con-
dition with 3 bed-
rooms, 1 full bath,
eat-in kitchen, 2 car
garage, fenced yard
& new gas heat.
$44,000
Call Ruth Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
HANOVER TWP.
Seller willing to help pay
Buyer's closing costs!!
19 Garrahan Street
Attractive 2-story in
great neighbor-
hood. Newer roof,
newer 2nd floor
replacement win-
dows, newer split
A/C system, large
eat-in kitchen, bed-
room pine flooring,
walk-up attic & a
mostly fenced yard.
REDUCED
$59,900
MLS#11-1754
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
HARDING
131 THEODORE ST.,
Beautiful bi-level
located in Hex
Acres, a quiet
country setting, yet
minutes from town.
This home features
quality workman-
ship and finishes
and is in absolute
move-in condition.
Features modern
kitchen and baths,
lower level family
room, sunroom,
deck and above
ground pool. All on
a large nicely land-
scaped lot.
MLS#11-2901
$160,000
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
HARVEYS LAKE
Large Family home,
private, on partly
wooded parcel over
1 1/2 acres. Large
front porch sur-
rounded by green-
ery. Well built &
maintained, natural
woodwork, updated
bathrooms.
$117,500
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
HARVEYS LAKE
Pole 165
Lakeside Drive
A truly unique
home! 7,300 sq.ft.
of living on 3 floors
with 168' of lake
frontage with
boathouse.
Expansive living
room; dining room,
front room all with
fireplaces.
Coffered ceiling;
modern oak kitchen
with breakfast
room; Florida room;
study & 3 room &
bath suite. 5
bedrooms & 4
baths on 2nd.
Lounge, bedroom,
bath, exercise room
& loft on 3rd floor.
In-ground pool & 2-
story pool house.
AC on 3rd floor.
$1,149,000
MLS# 10-1268
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
HUGHESTOWN
REDUCED
189 Rock St.
Spacious home with
4 bedrooms and
large rooms. Nice
old woodwork,
staircase, etc. Extra
lot for parking off
Kenley St.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3404
$99,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
JENKINS TWP.
10 Miller Street
3 bedroom, 1 bath
ranch recently dam-
aged by flooding.
No structural
issues, roof is
good, will need
basement and first
floor renovations.
Large lot, off-street
parking with car-
port, nice location.
MLS#11-3646
Originally 129,000
Reduced to
$42,500!
Eric Feifer
570-283-9100 x29
JENKINS TWP.
297 Susquehannock
Drive
A HOME FOR A HOME FOR
THE HOLIDA THE HOLIDAYS! YS!
Classic 2 story
home with 4 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths, 2
car garage. Master
bedroom with walk-
in closet, private
yard with above
ground pool,
kitchen overlooks
large family room.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2432
$259,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
JENKINS TWP.
475 S. Main St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story home with
vinyl replacement
windows, vinyl sid-
ing, large yard and
off street parking.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3545
Price reduced
$69,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
JENKINS TWP.
475 S. Main St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story home with
vinyl replacement
windows, vinyl sid-
ing, large yard and
off street parking.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3545
Price reduced
$69,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
KINGSTON
125 3rd Ave
Well kept 2 story
with 3 bedrooms
and 1.5 baths situat-
ed on a nice street
in Kingston. Newer
roof, furnace, water
heater, electric
service. Replace-
ment windows
throughout. Base-
ment has high ceil-
ings, ideal for re-fin-
ishing or workshop!
MLS 11-2167
$144,000
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
Find the
perfect
friend.
Call 829-7130
to place your ad.
The Classied
section at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL NL NNNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LE LEE LE LE LEE DER DDD .
timesleader.com
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 7D
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
129 S. Dawes
Ave.
4 bedroom, 1
bath, large
enclosed porch
with brick fire-
place. Full con-
crete basement
with 9ft ceiling.
Lots of storage, 2
car garage on
double lot in a
very desirable
neighborhood.
Close to schools
and park and
recreation. Walk-
ing distance to
downtown Wilkes-
Barre. Great fami-
ly neighborhood.
Carpet allowance
will be consid-
ered. For mor info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realty.inc.com
$129,900
MLS #11-1434
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
KINGSTON
220 Wright Ave
Modern 3 bedroom
rancher. Woodburn-
ing fireplace in living
room. Gas heat.
Central air condi-
tioning. Aluminum
siding. Newer roof.
Nice yard. Extras.
MLS 11-4225
$105,000
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
KINGSTON
38 W. Walnut St.
Charming 4/5 bed-
room with 1.5
baths. Beautifully
appointed kitchen
w/granite counter
tops, cherry cabi-
nets and hardwood
floors. Gas fireplace
in living room, lead-
ed glass windows
in living room and
dining room. Nice
back deck, 2 car
garage and 4 sea-
son front porch.
MLS 11-4103
$179,900
Jay A. Crossin
EXT. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
431 Chestnut Ave.
Charming 2 story
single family home
with upgrades,
including new
kitchen cabinets,
furnace, hot water
heater, 200 amp
electric, 2 car
detached garage.
Walk up attic for
additional storage
space. MLS 11-4106
$129,900
Jay A. Crossin
EXT 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
663 Westmoreland
Avenue
Charming 2-1/2
story with 3 bed-
rooms on 2nd + a
4th (12x24) on 3rd,
full bath upstairs,
half bath with laun-
dry on 1st floor, lots
of closet space, fin-
ished walk-out
basement and much
more! MLS 11-2340
$185,000
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
KINGSTON
76 N. Dawes Ave.
DO THE MATH!
Qualified FHA buy-
ers could possibly
be paying less than
$900 per month for
mortgage, taxes
and insurance.
NOW is the time to
buy. Stop throwing
your money away
renting. Well cared
for 2 bedroom
home with private
yard, garage and
driveway. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2278
$129,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
Located within 1
block of elementary
school & neighbor-
hood park this spa-
cious 4 bedrooms
offers 1450 sq. ft of
living space with
1.75 baths, walk up
attic, and partially
finished basement.
Extras include gas
fireplace, an in-
ground pool with
fenced yard, new
gas furnace & more.
$105,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
KINGSTON
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
46 Zerby Ave
Lease with option
to buy, completely
remodeled, mint,
turn key condition,
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, large
closets, with
hardwoods, carpet
& tile floors, new
kitchen and baths,
gas heat, shed,
large yard.
$134,900 (30 year
loan @ 4.5% with
5% down; $6,750
down, $684/month)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON
REDUCED!!
177 Third Ave.
Neat as a pin! 3
bedroom, 2.5
baths, end unit
townhome with nice
fenced yard. Bright
Spacious kitchen,
main level family
room, deck w/
retractable awning.
Gas heat/central
air, pull down attic
for storage and 1
car garage. Very
affordable town-
home in great cen-
tral location!
MLS 11-1282
$134,500
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
Spacious 2 story
home on lovely tree
lined street.
Includes 3 bed-
rooms, 3 baths (1
on each floor), Liv-
ing room, dining
room, family room,
office and kitchen.
All new windows,
fresh paint.
MLS 11-2676
$136,000
Call Kathy
570-696-5422
SMITH
HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-1195
KINGSTON
Stately brick 2-story
featuring formal liv-
ing room with fire-
place, formal dining
room, modern cher-
ry kitchen, knotty
pine study, spacious
family room, sun-
room, computer
room, TV room, 4
bedrooms, 5 baths.
MLS#11-2250
$339,000
Call Ruthie
570-714-6110
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
570-287-1196
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
SALE BY OWNER!
Charming, well
maintained. Front
porch, foyer,
hardwood floors,
granite kitchen, 4
bedrooms, living
room/large dining
room, 2 fire-
places, 2.5 baths,
sun room, base-
ment with plenty
of storage. Pri-
vate English style
back yard.
$195,000
570-472-1110
To place your
ad call...829-7130
LAFLIN
3 Main Street
Historic 120+ year
old home, many
original details, new
roof, updated elec-
trical and a huge
garage. Currently a
gift shop. Corner lot,
newly paved park-
ing area. $170,000
MLS 11-2115. Call
Betty at
Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-6127
LAFLIN
Lovely brick ranch
home in great
development. 2
bedrooms, 2.5
baths. All hardwood
floors, brand new
roof. 2 family rooms
suitable for mini
apartment. 1st floor
laundry, sunroom,
central air, alarm
system, 1 car
garage and electric
chair lift to lower
level. Very good
condition. 11-2437
$210,000
Call Nancy Answini
570-237-5999
JOSEPH P. GILROY
REAL ESTATE
570-288-1444
LAFLIN
TOWNHOUSE FOR
SALE BY OWNER
105 Haverford Drive
Move right into this
3 bedroom 1.5 bath
townhouse with
many recent
updates including
new bath room
/kitchen and finished
basement. $131,900
Call 570-903-6308
LAFLIN
22 Dogwood Drive
Beautifully kept
home on a quiet
dead-end street.
Handicap accessi-
ble. Convenient
Laflin location, close
to interstate and
turnpike. Last home
on street makes it
very private and
quiet! Home fea-
tures large base-
ment with extra ceil-
ing height, living
room opens to mod-
ern, eat-in kitchen,
4 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. Beautifully
landscaped yard
with large deck and
pond. MLS#11-3432
$218,900
Chris Jones
570-696-6558
LAKE SILKWORTH
Lake house com-
pletely remodeled
interior and exteri-
or. 2 bedroom, 1
bath, laundry room
and carport. Deed-
ed lake Access
MLS 11-2345
$88,000
Barbara Strong
570-762-7561
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES
570-735-7494
LARKSVILLE
Losing Hair House
Hunting? Reduce
the anxiety with
triple assurance of
good location,
extensive renova-
tions and new
kitchen and baths
that come with this
lovely two story with
great rear deck.
Comforting price
too - just $119,900.
MLS 11-1856. Call
Tracey McDermott
570-696-2468
906 Homes for Sale
LUZERNE
330 Charles St.
Very nice 2 bed-
room home in move
in condition with
updated kitchen
and baths. Nice
yard with shed and
potential off street
parking. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3525
$59,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
LUZERNE
4 bed, 1 1/2 bath.
WOW - Talk about
Charm! Stained
glass windows,
HUGE rooms, beau-
tiful woodwork and
wood floors plus
storage. Nice 162
sq ft enclosed
porch, 1886 sq ft.
Massive storage
unit outback, can be
converted to a mul-
tiple car garage.
Endless possibilities
here. Just needs the
right person to love
it back to life. MLS
11-3282. $139,900.
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
LUZERNE
867 Bennett
With just a minimum
amount of TLC, this
is a great starter
home. Nice location
with great view of
Wyoming Valley and
beyond, off street
parking in rear via
alley. All measure-
ments approximate.
BeinG sold as is.
MLS 10-2774
$60,000
Call Michelle
Boice
570-639-5393
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LUZERNE
REDUCED!
262 WALNUT ST.
Nicely redone 2
story on large
fenced corner lot.
Updates include,
vinyl siding, win-
dows, electric serv-
ice & wiring, newer
carpeting, 2 zoned
gas heat and all
new 2nd floor (gut-
ted and reinsulated.
3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
large eat in kitchen,
1st floor laundry and
attached shed that
could be a nice 2nd
bath. Shed and off
street parking
for 6 cars.
MLS 11-2564
$104,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
MESHOPPEN
Novak Road
Lovely, nearly com-
pleted, renovated
Victorian farmhouse
sits high on 7.81
acres featuring
panoramic pastoral
views, high ceilings,
original woodwork,
gutted, rewired,
insulated and sheet-
rocked, newer roof,
vinyl siding, kitchen
and baths. Gas
rights negotiable.
Lots of potential
with TLC. Elk Lake
$129,900
MLS# 11-525 Call
570-696-2468
906 Homes for Sale
MINERS MILLS
You will be
impressed by this
well kept 3 bedroom
charmer with in-
town location. Large
fenced yard & 2
tiered deck-great
for entertaining.
Large, bright eat-in
kitchen, spacious
family room with
fireplace & new car-
pet in master bed-
room and hall. 1 car
garage & shed.
MLS# 11-1623
$109,900.
Michael Slacktish
570-760-4961
Signature Properties
MOUNTAIN TOP
15 Albert Road
Home in good con-
dition! Nice rear
yard! Basement is
heated & semi fin-
ished! Hardwood
floors under carpet!
MLS#11-3703
$134,000
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
MOUNTAIN TOP
16 Hazlenut Drive
New granite count-
er tops/island! 3
zone heat, nice
lower level finished
with walkout, huge
inground pool,
fenced yard! Large
bedroom sizes.
Large family room
with fireplace & new
carpet. New garage
door! Hardwood in
living room & dining
room. MLS #11-2270
$389,000
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
MOUNTAIN TOP
3 story, 5 bedroom
home completely
remodeled in & out.
$245k with owner
financing with
20% down or will
lease with option
to purchase.
tj2isok@gmail.com
MOUNTAIN TOP
803 Aspen Drive
Brand new carpet in
lower level family
room! Hardwood on
1st floor dining
room, living room,
bedrooms & hall!
Large rear deck.
Master bedroom
opens to deck! Pri-
vate rear yard!
Basement door
opens to garage.
MLS #11-2282
$199,000
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
MOUNTAIN TOP
NEW LISTING
Nestled on just
under an acre just
minutes from 81S
this colonial offers
2194 sq. ft. of living
area plus a finished
basement. Enjoy
your summer
evenings on the
wrap around porch
or take a quick dip in
the above ground
pool with tier deck.
The covered pavil-
ion is ideal for pic-
nics or gatherings
And when the winter
winds blow cuddle
in front of the gas
fireplace and enjoy
a quiet night. Price
to sell, $185,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
NANTICOKE
111 E. Grand St.
One half double
block. 3 bedrooms,
plaster walls, alu-
minum siding & nice
yard. Affordable @
$34,900
Call Jim Krushka
TOWNE & COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
414 E. Grove Street
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with off
street parking,
backyard, new oil
furnace, windows,
wiring, kitchen,
bath, flooring &
paint. Excellent
condition. $89,500.
Seller Assist of $5,000
Call Bill Remey @
570-714-6123
NANTICOKE
W. Green St.
Nice 2 bedroom
Ranch style home,
gas heat, finished
basement, vinyl sid-
ing, deck. Move in
Condition. Affordable
@ $89,500. Call Jim
TOWNE & COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
NOXEN
PRICED TO SELL!
Brick ranch, large
living room, 3 bed-
rooms, sun room,
deck, full basement,
sheds & garage on
0.54 acres$139,500
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
PITTSTON
10 Garfield St.
Looking for a
Ranch???
Check out this
double wide
with attached 2
car garage on a
permanent foun-
dation. Large
master bedroom
suite with large
living room, fam-
ily room with
fireplace, 2 full
baths, laundry
room, formal
dining room,
vaulted ceilings
throughout and
MORE!
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 10-2463
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON
168 Mill St.
Large 3 bedroom
home with 2 full
baths. 7 rooms on
nice lot with above
ground pool. 1 car
garage. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3894
$89,900
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
PITTSTON
214 Elizabeth St.
Cozy 3 bedroom
home tastefully
done. Separate 1st
floor laundry, lots of
storage, vinyl sid-
ing, replacement
windows. 1 full bath
and 2 - 1/2 baths.
Finished bonus
room in basement
MLS 11-4172
$79,900
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
31 Tedrick St.
Very nice 3 bed-
room with 1 bath.
This house was
loved and you can
tell. Come see for
yourself, super
clean home with
nice curb appeal.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3544
Reduced to
$84,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
51 Plank St.
4 bedroom Vic-
torian home
completely
remodeled with
new kitchen &
baths. New
Berber carpet,
modern stain-
less steel appli-
ances in
kitchen. Private
yard, wrap
around porch,
corner lot with
off street park-
ing. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2864
$99,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
S
O
L
D
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PITTSTON
99 1/2 Pine St.
The owner of
this house took
pride in its
upkeep. It is
meticulous.
Home has 3
bedrooms, 1
bath, eat in
kitchen, living
room and dining
room. Walkout
basement with
paneled walls
and heat. Large
yard with newer
one car
detached
garage,
accessed from
rear alley. MLS
11-3555
$48,000
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON
Handyman Special
Pine Street
House, and/or sep-
arate corner lot
property $10,000.
each, or $15,000.
for both.
Call (215) 295-6951
PITTSTON
REDUCED!
95 William St.
1/2 double home
with more square
footage than most
single family
homes. 4 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
ultra modern
kitchen and remod-
eled baths. Super
clean. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 11-2120
$59,000
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON TWP.
38 Frothingham St.
Four square home
with loads of poten-
tial and needs
updating but is
priced to reflect its
condition. Nice
neighborhood.
Check it out. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3403
$69,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON TWP.
754 Laurel St.
Absolutely beau-
tiful move in
condition. This 2
bedroom Ranch
home with fully
finished base-
ment is in excel-
lent condition.
Come and see
for yourself. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3796
$129,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
PITTSTON TWP.
993 Sunrise Dr.
Horizon Estates
Fabulous end unit
townhome provides
luxurious, carefree
living. 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths with 1st
floor master suite.
Ultra kitchen with
granite and stain-
less appliances.
Dining room with
built in cabinet. 2
story living room
with gas fireplace
and hardwood. 2
car garage, mainte-
nance free deck,
nice yard that can
be fenced. Low
HOA fee for snow
removal and grass
cutting. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3488
$289,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
10 Norman St.
Brick 2 story home
with 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family
room with fireplace.
Lower level rec
room, large drive-
way for plenty of
parking. Just off the
by-pass with easy
access to all major
highways. For more
info and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2887
$169,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
122 PARNELL ST.
Beautiful bi-level
home on corner lot.
7 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, newer roof
and windows.
Fenced in yardFor
more info and phtos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.om
MLS 11-2749
$189,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON TWP.
STAUFFER POINT
42 Grandview
Drive
NEW PRICE
better than new
end unit condo,
with 1st floor
master bedroom
and bath, Living
room with gas
fireplace, hard-
wood floors in
living, dining
room & kitchen,
granite counter-
tops and crown
molding in
kitchen, with
separate eating
area, lst floor
laundry, heated
sunroom with
spectacular
view, 2 addition-
al bedrooms, full
bath and loft on
the 2nd floor, 2
car garage, gas
heat and central
air, priced to sell
$274,500 MLS
11-2324
call Lu-Ann
602-9280
additional pho-
tos and informa-
tion can be
found on our
web site, www.
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
S
O
L
D
PLAINS
1610 Westminster
Road.
DRASTIC PRICE
REDUCTION
Paradise found!
Your own personal
retreat, small pond
in front of yard, pri-
vate setting only
minutes from every-
thing. Log cabin
chalet with 3 bed-
rooms, loft, stone
fireplace, hardwood
floors. Detached
garage with bonus
room. Lots to see.
Watch the snow fall
in your own cabin
in the woods.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-319
$279,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PLAINS
2 bedroom, 2.5
bath. Luxury 1,950
sq ft end unit
Townhome in
sought after River
Ridge. Gas heat,
CAC, Hardwood &
wall to wall.
Marble tile master
bath with jetted
tub & seperate
shower. $199,500
Call 570-285-5119
PLAINS
3 bedroom, 2 bath
bi-level in good con-
dition with 2 car
garage, eat-in
kitchen and living
room/dining room
combo. Lower level
has framed out fam-
ily room with brick
fireplace. Very nice
lot. Electric base
board heat.
$139,900
Call Ruth Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
PLAINS
74 W. Carey St.
Affordable home
with 1 bedroom,
large living room,
stackable washer
& dryer, eat in
kitchen. Yard
with shed.
Low taxes.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-4068
$37,500
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PLAINS
KEYSTONE SECTION
9 Ridgewood Road
TOTAL BEAUTY
1 ACRE- PRIVACY
Beautiful ranch 2
bedrooms, huge
modern kitchen, big
TV room and living
room, 1 bath, attic
for storage, wash-
er, dryer & 2 air
conditioners includ-
ed. New Roof &
Furnace Furnished
or unfurnished.
Low Taxes! New
price $118,500
570-885-1512
906 Homes for Sale
PLYMOUTH
1 Willow St.
Attractive bi-level
on corner lot with
private fend in yard.
3-4 bedrooms and
1.5 baths. Finished
lower level, office
and laundry room
MLS 11-2674
$104,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
PLYMOUTH
OUT OF FLOOD ZONE
North Street
Large raised ranch
with 2 car garage.
Modern kitchen, 3
bedrooms, living
room, family room,
3 season porch, fin-
ished lower level
with 1 bath & laun-
dry. $139,900
570-779-2424
PLYMOUTH
Spacious 1791 sq. ft.
1/2 double with
wrap around porch,
shed & garage.
Semi modern
kitchen & bath. 3
bedrooms with gas
heat and plenty of
storage. $24,900.
Possible rent to own
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
SHAVERTOWN
4 Genoa Lane
There is much
attention to detail in
this magnificent 2
story, 4 bedroom, 2
full bath all brick
home on double
corner lot. Large
family room with
brick fireplace, all
oak kitchen with
breakfast area,
master suite, solid
oak staircase to
name a few.
MLS #11-3268
$525,000
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-07770
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
SHAVERTOWN
Enjoy the quiet life in
this spacious 3 bed-
room home on dou-
ble lot. Features
hardwood floor in
dining room, cov-
ered patio, over-
sized 2 car garage,
family room with
fireplace & finished,
walk out basement
with another fire-
place. MLS# 11-1873
$160,000
Michael Slacktish
570-760-4961
Signature Properties
SHAVERTOWN
Exquisite 4 bed-
room. Formal living
room, floor to ceiling
brick fireplace.
Formal dining room.
Beautiful eat in
kitchen, cherry cab-
inetry, granite coun-
ters, stainless steel
appliances. Master
suite, ash hardwood
floors, his/her clos-
ets and balcony.
Master bath, cherry
vanity and granite
counters. Spacious
24x28 family room,
entertainment unit &
bar. Office, built-ins.
Sunroom. Three car
garage. Completely
updated and well
maintained. This
home is convenient-
ly located on 2.5
park like acres just
minutes from Cross
Valley. MLS#11-2008
$519,000.
Call Ruthie
570-714-6110
Smith Hourigan Group
570-287-1196
Find
that
new
job.
The
Times Leader
Classied
section.
Call 829-7130
to place an
employment ad.
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL LL NNNNL LYONE NNNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LE LE LLE LE LE LEE LLE LEEE DER.
timesleader.com
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
PAGE 8D TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
Lovely 3 bedroom
2400 sf Cape Cod
with modern eat-in
kitchen, large sun-
room & family room.
Master bedroom
with master bath.
Central air, gas heat
& 2 car garage.
Very well land-
scaped with beauti-
ful paver sidewalks.
Quiet neighborhood.
Possible 6 month
rental for the right
tenant. $229,000
Call Ruth Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
SHAVERTOWN
Woodridge I
This spacious 2
story sits on a pri-
vate partially wood-
ed lot with inground
pool. Plenty of living
space, living room
with fireplace, first
floor den, and laun-
dry, needs some
attention but well
worth the price.
$159,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-288-6654
570-760-6769
SHICKSHINNY
Great New Con-
struction on 2 Acres
with 1 year Builders
Warranty! 2 Story
home with 4 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths,
living room with gas
fireplace , dining
room, kitchen,
breakfast room &
laundry room. dining
room with tray ceil-
ing, whirlpool tub in
master bath plus 2
car attached
garage, open front
porch & rear deck.
MLS 11-2453
$275,000
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
SWEET VALLEY
Adorable seasonal
cottage with rights
for North Lake. Two
bedrooms, fur-
nished, 10x10 shed,
front porch with
roof, deck, tip-top
condition! Make it
your getaway for
just $68,900!
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
SWEET VALLEY
REDUCED!
4 Oliver Road
Located in the back
part of Oliver Road
in a very private part
of North Lake in
Sweet Valley. Yearn-
ing to be restored,
lake front cape cod
in a very tranquil
setting was formerly
used as a summer
home. MLS 11-2113
$99,000
Jay Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
SWOYERSVILLE
10AM-12PM
SUNDAY 11/20/11
67 Watkins St
Large 4 bedroom
with many attractive
details emanating
from the French
door entrance foyer.
MLS#11-3962
$135,000
Call Al Clemont
570-371-9381
Smith Hourigan Group
570-714-6119
906 Homes for Sale
SWOYERSVILLE
120 Barber St.
Nice Ranch home,
great neighbor-
hood.
MLS 11-3365
$109,000
Call David
Krolikowski
570-288--0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
SWOYERSVILLE
33 Oliver St.
FOR FOR SALE SALE
BY BY OWNER OWNER
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
nice level yard,
wonderful neighbor-
hood completely
out of flood plane.
$66,900
570-472-3334
570-239-1557
SWOYERSVILLE
OUT OF FLOOD
ZONE
Estate. Nice brick
front ranch home on
a corner lot. 1 car
attached garage,
circle driveway,
central air. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 full bath
with 2 showers, Full
basement with
brand new water
proofing system
that includes a war-
ranty. Great loca-
tion. MLS 11-2127
$108,500
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
SWOYERSVILLE
REDUCED TO
$199,900
Luxurious End Townhouse
3 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, Cathedral
ceilings, hardwood
floors, gas heat,
Central Air, master
bath with whirlpool
tub & shower, lovely
landscaped fenced
yard, 1 car garage.
Great Location.
MLS#11-3533
Call Nancy Palumbo
570-714-9240
There are many
great reasons to
consider
Team Belchick!
Mary Ellen & Walter
work together in a
unique approach
that guarantees
your real estate
needs are handled
immediately &
professionally.
Mary Ellen
696-6566
Walter 696-2600
ext 301
THORNHURST
1114 Golf Course Dr
Raised Ranch with 3
bedrooms &
attached garage.
Spacious wrap
around deck and
enclosed patio. ADT
security system has
also been recently
installed. 11-8467
$125,000
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
THORNHURST
396 Cedar Lane
Retreat to this
charming Pocono
Style Contemporary.
A stones throw to
Pennsylvania's
state gamelands.
Relax or entertain
outdoors and enjoy
Pennsylvania's
abundant wildlife.
11-4354
$119,999
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
906 Homes for Sale
THORNHURST
68 Laurel Drive
True log home,
inside and out. 4
bedroom / 2 bath
home with full base-
ment. located in
quiet community.
Knotty pine interior,
living room fire-
place, wrap deck-
ing, paved drive and
more. MLS 11-4211
$114,900
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
TUNKHANNOCK
Affordable living on
acre, one mile
from Tunkhannock.
Cape Cod, 4 bed-
rooms, appliances
stay, newer metal
roof and replace-
ment windows.
Great price at
$119,500!
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
TUNKHANNOCK
Lovely bi-level, 4
bedroom home situ-
ated on scenic one
acre with pond,
above ground pool,
shed and fruit trees.
Stay cozy with 2 gas
stoves and coal
stove (in addition to
electric heating.)
Great buy at
$189,900
Shari Philmek
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
WANAMIE
Newport Twp
East Main Street
Handyman Special
Double Block
Two 2 story, 3-bed-
room units each
with attic, cellar,
bath and pantry.
Large 4 car garage.
Upper and lower
floors. As is for
$25,000. Call
570-379-2645
WAPWALLOPEN
604 Lily Lake Road
3 bedroom home in
beautiful country
setting. Large 3
stall detached
garage. Priced to
sell. MLS#11-1046
$124,900
Aggressive Realty
570-233-0340 or
570-788-8500
WEST HAZLETON
100 Warren St
16,000 sq. ft. com-
mercial building with
warehouse / offices.
Great location. 1
block west of Route
93. Approx. 3 miles
from 80/81 intersec-
tion. Many possibili-
ties for this proper-
ty--storage lockers;
flea market; game/
entertainment cen-
ter; laundromat;
auto garage.
$119,000
Call Karen at
Century 21 Select
Group - Hazleton
570-582-4938
WEST PITTSTON
16 Miller St.
4 bedroom Cape
Cod, one with hard-
wood floors. Cen-
tral air, nice yard in
Garden Village.
For more info and
photos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3645
$129,900
Call Tom
Salvaggio
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WEST PITTSTON
321 Franklin St.
Great 2 bedroom
starter home in the
Garden Village.
Brand new flooring
throughout, fresh
paint, vinyl siding
and replacement
windows. Newer
electric service, eat
in kitchen w/break-
fast bar. 1st floor
laundry room and
off street
parking.
MLS 11-2302
$89,500
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSING REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WEST PITTSTON
322 SALEM ST.
Great 1/2 double
located in nice
West Pittston
location. 3 bed-
rooms, new car-
pet. Vertical
blinds with all
appliances.
Screened in
porch and yard.
For more infor-
mation and pho-
tos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS#10-1535
$49,900
Charlie VM 101
S
O
L
D
WEST PITTSTON
Well cared for and
nicely kept. A place
to call home! Com-
plete with 2 car
oversized garage,
central air, first floor
laundry, eat in
kitchen. Convenient
to shopping, West
Pittston pool and
ball fields.
PRICE REDUCED!
$114,900
MLS 11-583
Call Judy Rice
570-714-9230
WEST WYOMING
438 Tripp St
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
Completely remod-
eled home with
everything new.
New kitchen, baths,
bedrooms, tile
floors, hardwoods,
granite countertops,
all new stainless
steel appliances,
refrigerator, stove,
microwave, dish-
washer, free stand-
ing shower, tub for
two, huge deck,
large yard, excellent
neighborhood
$154,900 (30 year
loan @ 4.5% with 5%
down; $7,750 down,
$785/month)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WEST WYOMING
550 JOHNSON ST
For Sale By Owner
Beautiful Colonial
home with 4 bed-
rooms, 3.5 baths,
eat in kitchen & for-
mal dining room
located in a won-
derful neighbor-
hood. Home has tile
floors, ceiling fans,
first floor laundry
room, & lower level
rec room. Gas fur-
nace with base-
board hot water,
above ground pool
& hot tub.
$256,800
Call 570-693-3941
906 Homes for Sale
WHITE HAVEN
123 Fern Ridge Rd.
PRICE REDUCED!
In Community of
White-Haven
Pocono's. Nice 3
Bedroom, 2 Bath
Ranch. Great
Vacation Home or
Year round Home.
Community Lake &
other amenities.
Close to Hunting,
Fishing, Golf and
Skiing. Close to
Rt 80. All offers
contingent to bank
short sale approval.
REDUCED!
$67,900
MLS# 11-765
Call Tony Wasco
570-855-2424
Trademark
Realtor Group
570-613-9090
WHITE HAVEN
124 Holiday Drive
4 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. Brick fire-
place in living room.
Large front deck.
Screened porch.
Unfinished dry base-
ment. Sold fur-
nished. Home close
to Route 940, Inter-
state 80, NE Ext to
PA turnpike, Route
81. Open floor plan.
MLS 11-5369
$89,000
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
WHITE HAVEN
180 Woodhaven
Tucked at the end of
a natural Spring-fed
Lake, a quiet, restful
setting gives you
the peace and tran-
quility youre
searching for.
Sophisticated log
design features
cathedral ceilings
with expansive
glass to soak in the
view overlooking
the lake. Expansive
living area with high,
vaulted ceiling leads
your eye to the open
loft and wide Cat-
walk. Easy access
to decks and patio
from every level to
enjoy nature at its
best. Huge 840 sq.
foot, guest quarters
so very convenient
for friends and fami-
ly. Call now to learn
more about this
very special proper-
ty. MLS 11-5544
$374,900
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
WHITE HAVEN
30-31 Oak Drive
3 Bedroom, 2 bath
single family.
11-6522
$129,900
570-643-2100
C21poconos.com
WILKES-BARRE
116 Amber Lane
Very nice bi-level
home with newer
laminate floors,
vaulted ceiling, 2
large bedrooms.
Finished lower level
with 1/2 bath and
laundry room. Large
family room, built in
garage, and wood
pellet stove. No
sign, alarm system.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3290
$89,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
134 Brown Street
Nicely remodeled,
spacious 2-story
with attached
garage on corner
lot. Modern, eat-in
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances; large lower
level Theatre Room
and additional rec
room with dry bar
and 5th bedroom.
Newer roof, mostly
newer replacement
windows & gas fur-
nace. MLS# 11-1817
REDUCED TO
$79,900
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
WILKES-BARRE
156 Sherman Street
HANDYMAN SPE-
CIAL. Extra Large
duplex with 7 bed-
rooms, 2 baths, fire-
place, screened
porch, full basement
and 2 car garage on
double lot in Wilkes-
Barre City. $59,500
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
WILKES-BARRE
185 West River St
Spacious, quality
home, brick - two
story with 6 bed-
rooms, 2 1/2 bath,
two fireplaces,
den, heated sun-
room off living
room, screened
porch off formal
dining room, mod-
ern eat-in kitchen,
garage. Many
extras... Sacrifice,
owner relocating
out of state
$125,000.
MLS 11-2474
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
WILKES-BARRE
221 Brown Street
Great first home or
down size. Nice
clean move in ready
no lawn work here.
2 car detached
garage and best of
all the Mortgage is
probably lower than
your rent payment.
$52,500
MLS# 11-871
Call Tony Wasco
570-855-2424
Trademark
Realtor Group
570-613-9090
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
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Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
231 Poplar St.
Rolling Mill Hill Section
Well-Maintained 3
bedroom home in
Move-in condition.
Hardwood floors,
upgraded appli-
ances & great stor-
age space. Private
driveway & nice
yard. MLS# 10-4456
$75,000
Barbara Young
Call 570-466-6940
COLDWELL BANKER,
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
Ext. 55
WILKES-BARRE
241 Dana Street
Spacious 3 bed-
room, 1.5 baths with
textured ceilings,
updated kitchen, all
appliances including
dishwasher, tiled
bath with whirlpool
tub, 2nd floor laun-
dry room. Replace-
ment windows.
DRASTIC
REDUCTION
$60,000
MLS# 11-88
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
26-28-30
Blackman Street
Nice investment tri-
plex conveniently
located on bus
route close to
schools. Grosses
over $3,000/month!
Separate gas, elec-
tric & water; park-
ing for 10+ cars.
Reduced to
$94,900.
MLS#11-423
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
WILKES-BARRE
29 Amber Lane
Remodeled 2
bedroom Ranch
home with new
carpeting, large
sun porch, new
roof. Move right
in! For more info
and photos
please visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-749
$79,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
WILKES-BARRE
35 Hillard Street
Great neighborhood
surrounds this
updated 2 story
home with original
woodwork. 3 bed-
room, 1 bath,
1,500sf oak eat-in
kitchen, hardwood
floors, stained glass
windows, large
rooms, fenced yard,
deck. Zoned R1
Single Family Zone.
$79,900
MLS #11-599
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
WILKES-BARRE
49 Hillard St.
Great 3 bedroom
home with large
modern kitchen.
Ductless air condi-
tioning on 1st floor.
Laundry on 2nd
floor. Nice deck and
fenced in yard. Off
street parking for 2
cards via rear alley
MLS 11-2896
$85,000
Call Shelby
Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
60 Saint Clair St
Great 4 bedroom
home with new
kitchen, furnace and
bath. Laundry room
off kitchen. Newer
windows and roof.
Hardwood on first
floor. Off street
parking. Older one
car garage. Walk up
attic. MLS 11-1478
$69,000
Call Nancy Answini
570-237-5999
JOSEPH P. GILROY
REAL ESTATE
570-288-1444
WILKES-BARRE
64 West River St
Beautifully restored
1890 Queen Anne
with working eleva-
tor located in
Wilkes-Barre's His-
toric District built by
Fred Kirby close to
riverfront parks and
downtown shops
and restaurants.
This architectural
gem has six bed-
rooms & 5 baths
and a modern
kitchen with granite
counters and SS
appliances. Original
2-story carriage
house with for two
cars. Hot tub includ-
ed. MLS 11-2316.
$329,900
Call Darren Snyder
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
DOUBLE LOT IN
WILKES-BARRE CITY
Extra large duplex.
Total 7 bedrooms, 2
baths, hardwood
floors, fireplace,
screened porch, full
basement and 2 car
garage. $58,000.
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
WILKES-BARRE
Emergency
Liquidation
3 bedroom, single
home. $22,500.
Must Sell. Call
570-956-2385
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
Great price! 3 bed-
room, 1 1/2 bath,
needs some love.
High ceilings, open
floor plan down-
stairs, extra room
upstairs for closet,
office, storage,
whatever you need.
Subject to short
sale, bank approval.
$37,900
MLS 11-3134
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
Lot 39 Mayock St.
9' ceilings through-
out 1st floor, granite
countertops in
kitchen. Very bright.
1st floor master
bedroom & bath.
Not yet assessed.
End unit. Modular
construction.
MLS #10-3180
$179,500
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
WILKES-BARRE
Nice home, great
price. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, wood floors,
off street parking,
Approx 1312sq ft.
Currently rented out
for $550 monthly,
no lease. Keep it as
an investment or
make this your new
home. MLS 11-3207
$46,000
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
PARSONS
Reduced - $79,900
262 Stucker Ave &
Extra Lot (3rd street
after baseball field)
7 room (3 bed-
rooms), 1 1/2 baths.
Lower Level has
family room and 1
car attached
garage. To settle
Estate. Drastically
reduced.
Original price
$119,900, now
reduced to
$79,900.
10-2472
Call Joe Bruno
570-824-4560
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED
60 Kulp St.
3-4 bedroom, 2
story home with
well kept hardwood
floors throughout.
Private driveway
with parking for 2
cards and nearly all
replacement
windows.
MLS 11-2897
$59,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
3 bedroom, 2 story,
with brick & stucco
siding. Beautiful
hardwood floors.
Semi-modern
kitchen. Finished
basement with fire-
place. Covered
back porch. Priced
to sell. $79,900.
MLS 11-2987
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
WYOMING
608 Wyoming Ave
Location, Location,
location! Either you
are looking to raise
your family or just
work from home this
amazing brick ranch
style property has it
all. Zoned commer-
cial, 3 very large
bedrooms and 3 1/2
baths, full finished
basement, library
room, oversized liv-
ing room, formal
dining room and so
much more. You
have to see it to
appreciate. Call
today for a private
tour of the property.
1 year Home War-
ranty. MLS 11-1870
PRICE
REDUCTION!!!
OWNER WANTS
OFFERS
$299,000
Call Tony Wasco
570-855-2424
Trademark
Realtor Group
570-613-9090
WYOMING
MOTIVATED SELLER!!
Nicely maintained
2-story traditional in
great neighbor-
hood. Modern oak
kitchen, open layout
in family room/den
with new floors,
above ground pool
in fenced rear yard.
1-car detached
garage with work-
shop area, all on a
nice wide lot.
MLS#11-2428
REDUCED TO
$139,900
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
WYOMING
Very nice ranch on
corner lot in great
neighborhood & out
of flood zone! Sharp
hardwood floors in 2
bedrooms & dining
room. Finished
basement with 3rd
bedroom. Relaxing
flagstone screened
porch. 1 car garage.
One block from ele-
mentary school plus
high school bus
stops at property
corner! MLS#11-3831
$139,500
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
YATESVILLE
PRICE REDUCED
12 Reid st.
Spacious Bi-level
home in semi-pri-
vate location with
private back yard. 3
season room. Gas
fireplace in lower
level family room. 4
bedrooms, garage.
For more informtion
and photos visit
wwww.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 10-4740
$149,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
906 Homes for Sale
YATESVILLE
REDUCED!
61 Pittston Ave.
Stately brick
Ranch in private
location. Large
room sizes, fire-
place, central
A/C. Includes
extra lot. For
more informa-
tion and photos
visit www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-3512
PRICE REDUCED
$189,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
S
O
L
D
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
AVOCA
25 St. Marys St.
3,443 sq. ft.
masonry commer-
cial building with
warehouse/office
and 2 apartments
with separate elec-
tric and heat. Per-
fect for contractors
or anyone with stor-
age needs. For
more information
and photos log onto
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
Reduced to
$89,000
MLS #10-3872
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
EDWARDSVILLE
89-91 Hillside St.
Out of the flood
plain, this double
has potential.
Newer roof and
some windows
have been
replaced. Property
includes a large
extra lot.
MLS 11-3463
$87,000
Call Roger Nenni
Ext. 32
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
5770-288-0770
HANOVER TWP
22 W. Germania St
This 6,600 sq. ft.
concrete block build-
ing has multiple
uses. 5 offices &
kitchenette. Over
5,800 sq. ft. ware-
house space (high
ceilings). 2 overhead
doors. $85,000
MLS 10-1326
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
HUGHESTOWN
165 Searle St.
Double block
home, great
investment
propPerty or live
in one side and
rent the other.
Two 3 bedroom,
6 room 1/2 dou-
bles . Great
walk up attic on
both sides.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3915
$49,900
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP.
1334 Main St.
1 story, 2,600 sq. ft.
commercial build-
ing, masonry con-
struction with
offices and ware-
housing. Central air,
alarm system and
parking. Great for
contractors or
anyone with
office/storage
needs. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3156
$84,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Find a
newcar
online
at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNL NNL NNNL NNLYONE NNNNNNNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LLE LE EE LE DER D .
timesleader.com
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 9D
962 Rooms 962 Rooms
Rooms starting at
Daily $39.99 + tax
Weekly $179.99 + tax
WiFi
HBO
Available Upon Request:
Microwave & Refrigerator
(570) 823-8027
www.casinocountrysideinn.com
info@casinocountrysideinn.com
Bear Creek Township
C
o
u
n
t
r
y
s
i
d
e
I
n
n
C
a
s
i
n
o
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
Immediate Occupancy!!
Efficiencies available
@30% of income
MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS
61 E. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
Affordable Senior Apartments
Income Eligibility Required
Utilities Included! Low cable rates;
New appliances; Laundry on site;
Activities! Curbside Public Transportation
Please call 570-825-8594
D/TTY 800-654-5984
CEDAR
VILLAGE
Apartment
Homes
Ask About Our
Fall Specials!
$250 Off 1st Months Rent,
& $250 Off Security
Deposit With Good Credit.
1 bedroom starting @ $690
F e a t u r i n g :
Washer & Dryer
Central Air
Fitness Center
Swimming Pool
Easy Access to
I-81
Mon Fri. 9 5
44 Eagle Court
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18706 (Off Route 309)
570-823-8400
cedarvillage@
affiliatedmgmt.com
EAST
MOUNTAIN
APARTMENTS
The good life...
close at hand
Regions Best
Address
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
822-4444
www.EastMountainApt.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
288-6300
www.GatewayManorApt.com
M ond a y - Frid a y 9 -5
Sa tu rd a y 1 0-2
W IL KE SW OOD
822-27 1 1
w w w .liv ea tw ilk esw ood .com
1 Bedroom Sta rting
a t$675.00
Includes gas heat,
w ater,sew er & trash
C onvenient to allm ajor
highw ays & public
transportation
Fitness center & pool
P atio/B alconies
P et friendly*
O nline rentalpaym ents
Flexible lease term s
APARTM E NTS
*RestrictionsAp p ly
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
KINGSTON
366 Pierce St.
Commercial build-
ing for sale.Highly
desirable corner
location with park-
ing for approxi-
mately 25 vehicles.
Would be attractive
for any retail or
commercial
operation.
MLS 11-2763
$300,000
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
584 Wyoming Ave.
MOVE-IN READY!
Three large offices
along with a recep-
tion area with built-
in secretarial/para-
legal work stations;
a large conference
room with built-in
bookshelves, kitch-
enette and bath-
room. Lower level
has 7 offices, 2
bathrooms, plenty
of storage. HIGHLY
visible location, off-
street parking. Why
rent office space?
Use part of building
& rent space- share
expenses and build
equity. MLS#11-995
$399,000
Judy Rice
570-714-9230
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
KINGSTON
7 Hoyt St
Nice duplex zoned
commercial, can be
used for offices as
well as residential.
All separate utilities.
Keep apt. space or
convert to commer-
cial office space.
Adjacent lot for sale
by same owner.
MLS 11-2176
$85,900
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
KINGSTON
LIGHT
INDUSTRIAL
134 Page Ave.
Light industrial
complex consisting
of main building
(8,417 S/F) with
offices and shop
areas. Clear-span
warehouse
(38x144); and pole
building (38x80)
on 1.16 acres.
MLS 11-1320
$299,000
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
LAFLIN
33 Market St.
Commercial/resi-
dential property
featuring Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, newly
remodeled bath-
room, in good con-
dition. Commercial
opportunity for
office in attached
building.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3450
Reduced
$159,000
Call Tom
570-262-7716
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
NANTICOKE
423 E. Church
St.
Great 2 family in
move in condi-
tion on both
sides, Separate
utilities, 6
rooms each. 3
car detached
garage in super
neighborhood.
Walking dis-
tance to col-
lege. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1608
$123,000
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
LINEUP
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PITTSTON
113 S. Main St.
Newer multi level
commercial building
in center of down-
town Pittston. Many
possibilities. Parking
in rear. For addi-
tional info & photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3886
$200,000
Call Lu-Ann
570-602-9280
PITTSTON
35 High St.
Nice duplex in great
location, fully occu-
pied with leases.
Good investment
property. Separate
utilities, newer fur-
naces, gas and oil.
Notice needed to
show. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3222
$89,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
PITTSTON
94 Church St.
Spacious double
block, one with one
side owner occu-
pied, 2nd side
needs cosmetic
care. Off street
parking for 2 vehi-
cles, walking dis-
tance to the down-
town. Pool and
patio deck.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3292
$76,500
Call Bill Williams
570-362-4158
PITTSTON
Duplex. Aluminum
siding, oil heat, semi
- modern kitchens,
long term tenant. On
a spacious 50 x
150 lot. Motivated
Seller. REDUCED.
$39,900
Anne Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
PITTSTON
SALE OR LEASE
PRICE REDUCED
Modern office build-
ing, parking for 12
cars. Will remodel
to suit tenant.
$1800/mo or pur-
chase for
$449,000
MLS 11-751
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON
Township Blvd.
MAKE AN OFFER!
Ideal location
between Wilkes-
Barre & Scranton.
Ample parking with
room for additional
spaces. Perfect for
medical or profes-
sional offices. Con-
tact agent to show.
Asking $945,000
Contact Judy Rice
570-714-9230
MLS# 10-1110
PLAINS
107-109 E. Carey St.
High traffic, high
potential location
with enough space
for 2 second floor
apartments. A
stones throw away
from the casino.
Large front win-
dows for showroom
display. Basement &
sub - basement for
additional storage
or workspace.
PRICE REDUCED
$99,500
MLS# 10-1919
Call Stanley
(570) 817-0111
COLDWELL
BANKER RUNDLE
REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
PLYMOUTH
155 E Walnut St.
Good investment
property knocking
on your door. Don't
miss out, come and
see for yourself.
Also included in the
sale of the property
is the lot behind the
home. Lot size is
25X75, known as
147 Cherry St.
$82,000
MLS# 10-2666
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
SCRANTON
Live in one and rent
the others to pay for
your mortgage! This
Multi-Unit features
gorgeous hardwood
floors in the 1st level
apartment. 2nd
level apartment has
4 bedrooms! Lower
Level apartment has
cozy efficiency.
Plenty of parking &
2 car carport is
another highlight.
Call Jesicca Skoloda
570-237-0463
JesiccaSkoloda
Realtor@gmail.com
MLS# 11-2741
$119,999
570-696-2468
WEST HAZLETON
3 bedroom town-
house. 1.5 bath, 1
car garage yard.
Only 4 years old.
$112,500 each or
buy all 6 for
$650,000
Garry Tokanets
Broker
Mountain City
Realty
570-384-3335
WILKES-BARRE
495-497 S. Grant St
Nice double block in
good condition with
2 bedrooms on
each side. New vinyl
siding. Bathrooms
recently remodeled.
Roof is 2 years old.
Fully rented. Ten-
ants pay all utilities.
MLS11-580.$55,500
Call Darren Snyder
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
WILKES-BARRE
98-100 Lockhart St
Great Investment
Opportunity.
Separate utilities.
Motivated seller!
MLS 11-4330
$80,000
Maria Huggler
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-587-7000
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WYOMING
PRICE REDUCED!
285 Wyoming Ave.
First floor currently
used as a shop,
could be offices,
etc. Prime location,
corner lot, full base-
ment. 2nd floor is 3
bedroom apartment
plus 3 car garage
and parking for
6 cars. For more
information and
photos go to
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-4339
$169,900
Call Charlie
VM 101
912 Lots & Acreage
DALLAS
New Goss Manor
lots. Prices ranging
from $59,900 to
$69,900. Public
water, sewer, gas &
electric available.
Call Kevin Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5420
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
DURYEA
44.59 ACRES
Industrial Site. Rail
served with all
utilities. KOZ
approved. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
$2,395,000
MLS#10-669
Call Charlie
EXETER
Ida Acres, Wyoming
Area School District.
6 lots remain, start-
ing at $38,000. Pri-
vate setting. Under-
ground utilities.
570-947-4819
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
EXETER
Out of flood area.
100x125ft. All utili-
ties in place. Build-
ing moratorium
does not apply to
this lot. $45,000
reduced to $42,000
Call 570-655-0530
HARDING
Mt. Zion Road
One acre lot just
before Oberdorfer
Road. Great place
to build your
dream home
MLS 11-3521
$29,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
LAFLIN
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
BUILD YOUR
DREAM HOME
on one of the last
available lots in
desirable Laflin.
Convenient location
near highways, air-
port, casino &
shopping.
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 11-3411
$34,900
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
912 Lots & Acreage
LEHMAN
New Listing!
Market Street
OVERLOOKING THE
HUNTSVILLE GOLF
COURSE. Own and
build your own
dream house over-
looking the 10th
green at the presti-
gious Huntsville Golf
Course. Picturesque
setting in the Back
Mountain area of
Lehman. Near Penn
State College,
Lehman. Accessed
by Market St.,
downtown Lehman
corner off Rt. 118 or
passed the
Huntsville dam. Dri-
veway in place, sep-
tic approved. All on
over 1 acre of prime
10th green view
land. MLS#11-2860
$107,000
Bob Cook
570-696-6555
MOUNTAIN TOP
333 Oakmont Lane
Owner had property
surveyed.Copies
available upon
request. Property
was partially
cleared for a home
2-3 years ago
MLS 11-3300
$39,900
John Shelley
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
MOUNTAIN TOP
Crestwood Schools!
126 Acres for Sale!
Mostly wooded with
approx. 970 ft on
Rt. 437 in
Dennison Twp.
$459,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
MOUNTAIN TOP
Several building lots
ready to build on!
ALL public utilities!
Priced from
$32,000 to
$48,000! Use your
own Builder! Call
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
NEW PRICING!!!
EARTH
CONSERVANCY
LAND FOR SALE
*61 +/- Acres
Nuangola
$99,000
*46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.,
$79,000
*Highway
Commercial
KOZ Hanover Twp.
3 +/- Acres
11 +/- Acres
*Wilkes-Barre Twp.
32 +/- Acres
Zoned R-3
See additional Land
for Sale at
www.earth
conservancy.org
570-823-3445
NEWPORT TOWNSHIP
1 mile south of
L.C.C.C. 2 lots
available.
100 frontage
x 228 deep.
Modular home
with basement
accepted.
Each lot $17,000.
Call
570-714-1296
SWEET VALLEY
Mooretown Road
Well and septic
already on site.
Build your home on
this beautiful 2.2
acre lot. 2 car
garage on site with
fruit trees, flowers,
grape vines and
dog run. From Dal-
las take Rt. 118 to
right on Rt. 29 N,
left on Mooretown
Road for about 1/2
mile, see sign
on left.
MLS 11-2779
$59,200
Call Patty Lunski
570-735-7494
Ext. 304
ANTONIK AND
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
570-735-7494
915 Manufactured
Homes
ASHLEY
MOBILE HOME
2 bedroom, fur-
nished, $23,000
(570) 655-9334
(570) 762-4140
ASHLEY PARK
Laurel Run & San
Souci Parks, Like
new, several to
choose from,
Financing&Warranty,
MobileOneSales.net
Call (570)250-2890
Line up a place to live
in classified!
DALLAS
Valley View Park
3 bedroom home,
end lot. Large deck.
Call 570-675-2012
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
WE BUY HOMES
Any Situation
570-956-2385
WE BUY HOUSES
570-472-3472
938 Apartments/
Furnished
DALLAS
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
refrigerator, w/d
and stove provided,
off-street parking,
no pets. $650 per
month, plus utilities,
& security.
Call 570-674-7898
HANOVER TWP.
Carey Ave. Bridge
FULLY FURNISHED NEW
LOFT APARTMENT.
600 s/f. Includes all
utilities, stove, laun-
dry, fridge, micro,
dishwasher, dispos-
al, WIFI, cable, A/C,
granite, plasma TV,
hardwood, lovely
modern furniture,
large closets, pri-
vate entrance with
deck. Shared
inground pool, grill,
& off street parking.
Smoke on deck.
Pictures on request.
MUST SEE! 4 miles
to 81. $750/month.
570-332-8026
To place your
ad call...829-7130
WEST PITTSTON
Attractive 1 room
furnished efficiency.
Cherry kitchen cabi-
nets, granite bath,
built-ins, washer/
dryer. Security &
references. Non
smokers, no pets.
$625. Includes heat
& water.
570-655-4311
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ASHLEY
1 BEDROOM 1 BATH
22 North Main St.
Available now. mod-
ern kitchen, off
street parking,
washer and dryer
included, no pets,
$400 per month
plus electric / $400
security, Call
901-356-4233
ASHLEY
1st floor, 2 bed-
room. Off street
parking. Washer
dryer hookup. Appli-
ances. Bus stop at
the door. $575.
Water Included.
570-954-1992
ASHLEY
1 or 2 bedroom apt.
$475 or $500 per
month. Off street
parking, stove,
refrigerator, sewer.
Porch/patio. Credit
check, No pets.
Call 570-715-7732
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
AVOCA
3 rooms. Incl. heat,
hot water, water,
garbage and sewer.
Appliances, off
street parking.
Security, no pets
$490 per month
570-655-1606
DALLAS
Modern 1st floor
with all appliances.
Off street parking.
No pets. $550 per
month + utilities.
570-639-1462
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
DALLAS TWP
CONDO FOR LEASE:
$1,800. 2 bedroom/
2 Bath. Call Us to
discuss our great
Amenity & Mainte-
nance program!
Call 570-674-5278
DALLAS
Large 3 bedroom
2nd floor. No pets.
Off street parking.
Call Joe570-881-2517
Dallas, Pa.
MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
220 Lake St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized program.
Extremely low
income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,250.
570-675-6936,
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
DALLAS
Newberry Estates
Furnished or Unfur-
nished 3 bedroom,
2 bath completely
redone condomini-
um. Rent includes
maintenance fee
and country club
fee. $1500 per mo.
NO PETS.
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
DUPONT
Completely remod-
eled, modern 2 bed-
room apartment.
Heat and sewer
included. Lots of
closet space, with
new tile floor and
carpets. Includes
stove, refrigerator,
washer, dryer. nice
yard and neighbor-
hood, no pets.
$795/month + $1000
deposit. Call
570-479-6722
DURYEA
Unique NY loft style
apartment. 2nd
floor. 1 bedroom. No
pets. All appliances
included. Washer,
dryer, etc. Water &
garbage included.
$750 + utilities.
570-237-5361
EDWARDSVILLE
APARTMENT FOR RENT
2 story, 2 bedroom,
modern kitchen &
bath. Hardwood
floors, full base-
ment. Gas heat, hot
water baseboard.
All appliances. No
pets. $525 + securi-
ty. 570-825-6259
EXETER
2 bedroom, modern
kitchen and bath,
Includes OSP
stove, fridge, heat,
water, sewer.
No Pets. $650.
570-693-1294
FORTY FORT
2 bedroom, 2nd
floor. $550 per
month + utilities.
No pets, call
570-239-5841
FORTY FORT
Large, modern 2
bedroom, 2nd floor.
Eat in kitchen with
appliances. Dining
area. Spacious living
room, bath, A/C
units, laundry, off
street parking.
Great location. No
pets or smoking.
Garbage & water
included. $575 +
utilities. Call
570-714-9234
FORTY FORT
Newly renovated,
great neighbor-
hood. 2nd floor.
Non smoking. Oak
floors, new carpet
in master bed-
room. new win-
dows, 4 paddle
fans, bath with
shower. Stove &
fridge, dishwash-
er. Off street
parking, coin- op
laundry. $575 +
gas, electric &
water. References
required, no pets
570-779-4609 or
570-407-3991
FORTY FORT
SPACIOUS
Home, for lease,
available immedi-
ately, 1 bedroom, 1
bath room, washer
and dryer provided,
single car attached
garage, no pets,
$700/per month,
plus utilities. Call
570-287-1246
GLEN LYON
2 bedrooms, Sec-
tion 8 Accepted,
$450/per month,
water and sewer
paid. $450/security
deposit. Call
570-561-5836
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
1 bedroom, Tile
kitchen & bath, wall
to wall carpeting,
refrigerator & stove
provided, washer/
dryer hookup,
No Pets, $375/
month + utilities.
Available Dec-1st.
Call 570-824-5176
after 10 a.m.
HANOVER TWP
Rear Lee Park Ave.
3 bedroom. OSP,
References and
security required.
$600/month
917-225-9961 Mike
HANOVER TWP.
1 bedroom, 1 bath-
room, all appliances
provided, off-street
parking, no pets,no
smoking. Heat,
sewer, hot water
included, $550 per
month + 1st & last
month & $400 secu-
rity de-posit. Call:
570-852-0252
after 8:00 a.m.
HANOVER TWP.
1 bedroom. All
remodeled. Ceram-
ic & hardwood
floors. Fireplace.
$475/month + utili-
ties. No pets.
Call (570) 574-8863
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
1ST FLOOR APT.
1 or 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, no pets,
heat, hot water, &
garbage. $550. plus
1 months security
due at signing
deposit.
570-239-4360
HANOVER TWP.
3 bedrooms. 2nd
floor. Water, hot
water, sewer includ-
ed. Large rooms.
Washer/dryer, dish-
washer, stove &
fridge included. Off
street parking. No
pets. Section 8
Okay. $650/month.
Call (570) 677-2328
HANOVER TWP.
Lyndwood Ave.
3 bedrooms, 1st
floor, in nice
neighborhood. Dish-
washer,
washer/dryer hook
up. Parking, porch
storage. $600/per
month + utilities &
security deposit.
Call 904-382-4509
HANOVER TWP.
Out of flood zone.
Private, spacious
2nd floor, 3 bed-
room. Wall to wall
carpet, large living
room & kitchen,
2nd floor porch
with spectacular
views, washer/
dryer hookup.
Garbage & sewer
& cable included.
$650/ month +
utilities & security.
570-592-4133
HARVEYS LAKE
1 bedroom, LAKE
FRONT apartments.
Wall to wall, appli-
ances, lake rights,
off street parking.
No Pets. Lease,
security &
references.
570-639-5920
Harveys Lake
LAKE FRONT
Beautiful lake views!
Private Setting. Fully
furnished 2 bed-
room, 2 bath apart-
ment. Dock, ample
parking. $1500
includes cable, DVR,
high speed internet
and all utilities. Short
Term Lease Available
570-639-1469
Available Immediately
KINGSTON
1 BEDROOM
2 BEDROOM
WILKES-BARRE
2 BEDROOMS
All Apartments
Include:
Appliances &
Maintenance
R REFERENCES EFERENCES & &
L LEASE EASE R REQUIRED EQUIRED. .
570-899-3407
Tina Randazzo
Property Mgr
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
1.5 bedroom, 1st
floor, washer/dryer,
porch, yard, park-
ing, No Pets,
Quiet/Convenient
Smoke Free Build-
ing. $475. + utilities.
Discount available.
Available 12/1
570-574-9827
KINGSTON
131 S. Maple Ave.
3 room apartment -
2nd floor. Heat &
hot water included.
Coin Laundry. Off
street parking. No
pets/smoking. $645
570-288-5600
or 570-479-0486
KINGSTON
1st floor, 2 bed-
rooms, private park-
ing, quiet neighbor-
hood, near colleges.
$600/month + utili-
ties, 1 month rent &
security.
AVAILABLE NOW!
570-656-7125
KINGSTON
1st floor. Renovated,
spacious 2 bed-
room. Gas heat &
AC. Living room/din-
ing. Eat in kitchen
with appliances.
Laundry in unit. Off
street parking.
Screened in porch.
No pets. No smok-
ing. $750/month +
utilities.
570-714-9234
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
KINGSTON
2ND FLOOR APT
Available immedi-
ately, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath room, refriger-
ator and stove pro-
vided, off-street
parking, no pets,
$550/per month,
plus utilities, $550/
security deposit.
Call 570-574-9072
to set an
appointment
KINGSTON
2nd Floor. Avail-
able Nov. 1.
2 bedrooms, ren-
ovated bathroom,
balcony off newly
renovated kitchen
with refrigerator &
stove, central air,
newly painted, off-
street parking, no
pets. $600 per
month plus utili-
ties, & 1 month
security deposit.
570-239-1010
KINGSTON
40 Pierce Street
3rd floor. 2 bed-
room. Heat, hot &
cold water, trash
included. $595.
Cats considered.
Call (570) 474-5023
KINGSTON
795 Rutter Ave
Screened porch,
kitchen downstairs
with appliances,
washer & dryer,
upstairs living room,
bedroom & bath-
room. $510/month +
utilities. No pets.
570-417-6729
KINGSTON
Beautiful execu-
tive style apart-
ment in large his-
torical home. 2
bedrooms, 1 bath,
granite kitchen,
dining room, living
room, basement
storage, beautiful
front porch wash-
er/dryer. $1,100
monthly plus utili-
ties. No pets. No
smoking.
570-472-1110
KINGSTON
EATON TERRACE
317 N. Maple
Ave. Large Two
story, 2 bed-
room, 1.5 bath,
Central Heat &
Air, washer/dryer
in unit, parking.
$840 + utilities &
1 month security
570-262-6947
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
Kingston
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts
3 Bedroom
Townhomes
Gas heat included
FREE
24hr on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
Call Today
or stop by
for a tour!
570-288-9019
KINGSTON
SPACIOUS 1/2 DOUBLES
3 bedrooms, back
yard. Separate utili-
ties. No pets. Back-
ground & security.
$775/month.
570-242-8380
KINGSTON
Renovated 2 bed-
room townhouse.
Eat in kitchen, tons
of closet space.
Office. Front & side
porch. Off street
parking. Full base-
ment. $690
610-389-8226
KINGSTON
West Bennett St.
Twinkle in Kingstons
Eye, 2nd floor, 1000
sq. ft. 2 bed, Central
Air, washer/dryer
and appliances. No
pets. Non-smoking.
1 car off street park-
ing. Available Nov-1.
$700/month + gas,
electric, 1 year lease
& security.
570-814-1356
KINGSTON
Wyoming Avenue
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room, appliances
included, no pets,
$425 + utilities. Call
570-287-9631 or
570-696-3936
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LARKSVILLE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
$775. With discount.
All new hardwood
floors and tile. New
cabinets / bath-
room. Dishwasher,
garbage disposal.
Washer/dryer hook-
up. Off street park-
ing. Facebook us at
BOVO Rentals
570-328-9984
LARKSVILLE
Very clean, 1st floor
3 Bedroom with
modern bath and
kitchen. New floor-
ing, large closets.
Off Street Parking,
fenced yard. Water
& garbage included.
Tenant pays electric
& gas service.
$545/month. No
pets. One year
lease.
570-301-7723
LUZERNE
1 bedroom, wall to
wall, off-street
parking, coin
laundry, water,
sewer & garbage
included. $495/
month + security
& lease. HUD
accepted. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
MOOSIC
4 rooms, 2nd floor,
heat, water, sewer
included. $695.
Security /references
570-457-7854
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 Bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Handicap Accessi-
ble. Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
Find the
perfect
friend.
Call 829-7130
to place your ad.
The Classied
section at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL NL NNNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LE LE E LE LE LE E DER DDD .
timesleader.com
Find the
perfect
friend.
Call 829-7130
to place your ad.
The Classied
section at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL NL NNNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LE LE E LE LE LE E DER DDD .
timesleader.com
PAGE 10D TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
OFFICENTERS - Pierce St., Kingston
Professional Ofce Rentals
Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovations Various Size Suites Available
Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial
Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
For Rental Information Call: 1-570-287-1161
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
MOUNTAIN TOP
WOODBRYN
1 & 2 Bedroom.
No pets. Rents
based on income
start at $405 &
$440. Handicap
Accessible. Equal
Housing Opportuni-
ty. 570-474-5010
TTY711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider and
employer.
Immediate Opennings!
NANTICOKE
1, 2, OR 3 BEDROOMS
AVAILABLE
1st month deposit
and rent a must.
570-497-9966
516-216-3539
Section 8 welcome
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom, 1st
floor. Large eat in
kitchen, fridge,
electric stove,
large living room,
w/w carpeting,
master bedroom
with custom built
in furniture. Ample
closet space.
Front/back porch-
es, off street
parking, laundry
room available.
No dogs, smok-
ing, water, sewer,
garbage paid.
$550/mo + gas,
electric, security,
lease, credit,
background
check.
(570) 696-3596
NANTICOKE
2nd Floor apart-
ment for a tenant
who wants the
best. Bedroom, liv-
ing room, kitchen &
bath. Brand new.
Washer/dryer hook-
up, air conditioned.
No smoking or
pets. 2 year lease,
all utilities by ten-
ant. Sewer &
garbage included.
Security, first & last
months rent
required. $440.00
570-735-5064
NANTICOKE NANTICOKE
347 Hanover St.
Large 1 bedroom,
1st floor, wall to
wall carpet, eat-in
kitchen with appli-
ances, washer &
dryer hookup,
porch & shared
yard. $395/mo +
utilities & security.
New energy effi-
cient gas furnace.
Pet Friendly.
Call 570-814-1356
NANTICOKE
603 Hanover St
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room. No pets.
$500 + security, util-
ities & lease. Photos
available. Call
570-542-5330
NANTICOKE
Nice clean 1
bedroom. Heat, hot
water, garbage fee
included. Stove,
fridge, air-condition-
ing, washer/dryer
availability. Security.
$525 per month
Call (570) 736-3125
NANTICOKE
Spacious 1 bedroom
apartment. Washer
& dryer, full kitchen.
No pets. $465 +
electric. Call
570-262-5399
NANTICOKE
Two level, 1 bed-
room, 1 bathroom,
all appliances ,
sewer and garbage
included, off-street
parking, no pets,
quiet neighborhood
$460/per month,
plus 1 month securi-
ty.
Call (570)441-4101
NANTICOKE
Very clean, nice, 2
bedroom. Water,
sewer, stove, fridge,
Garbage collection
fee included. W/d
availability. Large
rooms. Security,
$535/mo.
570-736-3125
PARSONS
4 bedroom, newly
renovated. w/d
hookups. No Pets.
Proof of employ-
ment and refer-
ences required.
$650/per month,
(570) 466-4619
PITTSTON
152 Elizabeth Street
Spacious 2 bed-
room apartment with
ample closet space.
Off street parking.
All utilities and appli-
ances included. No
pets. $795 + lease &
security. Call
570-510-7325
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
3 bedroom, living
room, kitchen, bath,
foyer & enclosed
porch. Off street
parking. On site
laundry. Tenant pays
electric, sewage &
trash. Water includ-
ed. $650 + security.
(570) 881-1747
PITTSTON
Completely renovat-
ed 1 bedroom effi-
ciency, 2nd floor.
Appliances & utili-
ties included except
electric. Off street
parking. Some pets
ok. $595.
570-969-9268
PITTSTON
EFFICIENCY
Unfurnished.
1 bedroom,
kitchen, living
room. All appli-
ances included.
$650/month.
814-2752
PITTSTON
Jenkins Twp.
Newly renovated, 4
bedrooms, 2 full
baths, living room,
kitchen, stove, &
fridge included
washer/dryer hook-
up, off-street park-
ing. Heat & water
included. $875. per
month + security
deposit. Credit
check & references.
Cell 917-753-8192
PLAINS
15 & 17 E. Carey St
Clean 2nd floor,
modern 1 bedroom
apartments. Stove,
fridge, heat & hot
water included. No
pets. Off street
parking. $490-$495
+ security, 1 yr lease
Call 570-822-6362
570-822-1862
Leave Message
PLAINS
1st floor. Modern 2
bedroom. Kitchen
with appliances.
Convenient loca-
tion. No smoking.
No pets.
$550 + utilities.
570-714-9234
PLAINS
2 bedroom, 1st
floor, off street
parking, large living
space. $400/mo +
utilities. No pets or
smoking. Call
570-820-8822
PLYMOUTH
Large, spacious 1 or
2 bedroom. Appli-
ances and utilities
included. Off street
parking. $600/per
month. Call
570-704-8134
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
PLYMOUTH
TOWNHOUSE
Convenient loca-
tion, very low
maintenance.
Total electric. Liv-
ing and dining
room, 1.5 baths. 2
large bedrooms.
Appliances, w/d
hookup included.
Very small yard.
Private parking
sewer paid, secu-
rity reference and
lease. Not section
8 approved. No
smoking or pets
$575 + utilities.
570-779-2694
SCRANTON
GREEN RIDGE SECTION
Large 1 bedroom.
Heat included.
Bathroom, eat in
kitchen, living room.
Off street parking.
$620/month
(631) 821-8600 x103
SWOYERSVILLE
26 Bohack St.
1 bedroom, 2nd
floor, heat, hot &
cold water included.
Updated & painted.
Off street parking.
Cats considered.
$575 + security &
lease. Call
570-474-5023
UPPER ASKAM
(Hanover SD)
2 bedrooms, 1 bath
w/d hookup, newly
remodeled, upgrad-
ed electrical, gas
heat. $600 month+
utilities, security
deposit/lease. Pet
friendly with owner
approval for addi-
tional $25/mo.
570-690-8669
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WANTED TO RENT:
BY NOVEMBER 30
Home or 2 bed-
room apartment in
Nanticoke.
Will pay top
dollar & 6
month advance.
Call 570-899-5758
WEST PITTSTON
2nd floor efficiency.
Includes stove,
refrigerator fur-
nished. Includes
heat, electric, water
& sewer. No wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Off street parking &
deck. $600/month.
Security required.
570-299-7153
WEST PITTSTON
East Packer Avenue
2 bedroom Town-
house with full
basement, 1 bath,
off street parking.
$625/mo + utilities.
No Pets. 570-283-
1800 M-F, 570-388-
6422 all other times
West Pittston, Pa.
GARDEN VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
221 Fremont St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized
program. Extremely
low income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,250.
570-655-6555,
8 am-4 pm,
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
WEST WYOMING
MODERN
429 West Eighth St.
Available immedi-
ately, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath room, stove-
washer-dryer, off-
street parking, no
pets, Patio, $575.
/per month, Sewer
& Garbage, $575.
/security deposit.
Call 570-760-0459
WILKES-BARRE
135 Westminster
St., 2nd floor, 2 bed-
rooms, living room.
Laundry hookup.
Recently renovated.
Pet friendly. Section
8 Welcome. $495 +
utilities.
Call 570-814-9700
WILKES-BARRE
151 W. River St.
NEAR WILKES
1st floor. 2 bed-
rooms, carpet.
Appliances includ-
ed. Sewer & trash
paid. Tenant pays
gas, water & elec-
tric. Pet friendly.
Security deposit &
1st months rent
required. $600.
570-969-9268
WILKES-BARRE
1st floor, 3 sizeable
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, big living
room, plenty of
closets. Front and
side entrance, OSP.
$695/mo incl.water.
1 year lease, securi-
ty and application
fee. Call Holly
570-821-07022
EILEEN R. MELONE
REAL ESTATE
570-821-7022
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom; all
utilities included;
coin op laundry; No
pets, background
check. $575/month
+security. Call
(570) 822-9625
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
w/d hookup. Off
street parking for 2.
Gas heat. $660
plus utilities, securi-
ty and lease
deposit. Pet friendly
with owner
approval for addi-
tional $25/month.
570-690-8669
* WILKES-BARRE *
3 bedroom. Heat &
hot water included.
Rent based on
income.
Call 570-472-9118
WILKES-BARRE
447 S. Franklin St.
Must see! 1 bed-
room, study, off
street parking,
laundry. Includes
heat and hot
water, hardwood
floors, appliances,
Trash removal.
$575/mo Call
(570)821-5599
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
AMERICA REALTY
RENTALS
ALL UNITS
MANAGED
1 block WB
General
Hospital
1-2 bedrooms
$465. & Up
+ utilities
Remodeled,
appliances,
laundry, park-
ing. Employ-
ment applica-
tiopn, lease.
NO PETS/
SMOKING
288-1422
WILKES-BARRE
Barney Street
3rd floor, 2-3 bed-
room attic style
apartment. Eat in
kitchen, private
entrance. Includes
hot water & free
laundry. Pets ok.
$450 / month. Secu-
rity, references.
570-237-0124
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, 2 bedroom,
duplex. Stove,
hookups, parking,
yard. No pets/no
smoking.
$495 + utilities.
Call 570-868-4444
WILKES-BARRE
In desirable area.
2 bedrooms,
newly renovated,
close to public
transportation.
$500/month
+ utilities.
973-216-9174
WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison St.
Quiet neighborhood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included. $625
Call Aileen at
570-822-7944
WILKES-BARRE
MAYFLOWER AREA
1 bedroom with
appliances on 2nd
floor. Nice apart-
ment in attractive
home. Sunny win-
dows & decorative
accents. Off street
parking. No pets, no
smoking. Includes
hot water.
$400 + utilities
570-824-4743
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower Section
1 bedroom apart-
ment available. Nice
Area. Duplex (1 unit
ready now). Heat
and hot water. Rent
with option to buy. No
pets. Call
570-823-7587
WILKES-BARRE
Small efficiency at
281 S. Franklin St;
3rd floor; kitch-
enette & bath. $400
per month includes
heat.
Call 570-333-5471
with references
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 ok.
570-332-5723
WILKES-BARRE TWP
A must see newly
remodeled 4
rooms. Smoke free,
pet free, ceiling
fans & smoke
detectors through-
out, stove included.
Sewer paid. Clean
quiet setting.
$575/month + utili-
ties & security.
Available Dec 1st.
Can be seen now.
570-822-6115
Leave message.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
water included
1 bedroom
efficiency water
included
2 bedroom
single family
3 bedroom
single family
HANOVER
4 bedroom
large affordable
2 bedroom
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom
large, water
included
PITTSTON
Large 1
bedroom water
included
PLAINS
1 bedroom
water included
KINGSTON
3 Bedroom Half
Double
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-821-1650
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WILKES-BARRE/NORTH
1 & 2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
AVAILABLE NOW!!
Recently renovated,
spacious, wood
floors, all kitchen
appliances included,
parking available.
1 bedroom $530 all
utilities included.
2 bedroom $500 +
utilities.
Call Agnes
347-495-4566
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
WYOMING
BLANDINA
APARTMENTS
Deluxe 1 & 2 bed-
room. Wall to Wall
carpet. Some utili-
ties by tenant. No
pets. Non-smoking.
Elderly community.
Quiet, safe. Off
street parking. Call
570-693-2850
WYOMING
Corner of Wyoming
Ave and 6th St. 2nd
floor, 1 bedroom,
non smoking apart-
ment. Parking.
Includes heat, water
sewer & garbage.
No pets. $600 + util-
ities & security.
Available 12/1. Call
570-430-8000
WYOMING
Updated 1 bedroom.
New Wall to wall
carpet. Appliances
furnished. Coin op
laundry. $550. Heat,
water & sewer
included. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
944 Commercial
Properties
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
1,700 - 2,000 SF
Office / Retail
4,500 SF Office
Showroom,
Warehouse
Loading Dock
Call 570-829-1206
FORTY FORT
Free standing build-
ing. Would be great
for any commercial
use. 1900 sq. ft. on
the ground floor
with an additional
800 sq. ft in finished
lower level. Excel-
lent location, only 1
block from North
Cross Valley
Expressway and
one block from
Wyoming Ave (route
11) Take advantage
of this prime loca-
tion for just $895
per month!
570-262-1131
OFFICE OR STORE
NANTICOKE
1280 sq ft. 3 phase
power, central air
conditioning. Handi-
cap accessible rest
room. All utilities by
tenant. Garbage
included. $900 per
month for a 5 year
lease.
570-735-5064.
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PROFESSIONAL
COMMERCIAL SPACE
West Pittston
Village Shop
918 Exeter Ave
Route 92
1500 sq. ft. &
2,000 sq. ft.
OUT OF FLOOD ZONE
570-693-1354 ext 1
315 PLAZA
900 & 2400 SF
Dental Office -
direct visibility to
Route 315 between
Leggios & Pic-A-
Deli. 750 & 1750 SF
also available. Near
81 & Cross Valley.
570-829-1206
944 Commercial
Properties
WAREHOUSE
WILKES-BARRE
SMALL WARE-
HOUSE FOR RENT.
MUST SEE.
Call 570-817-3191
WAREHOUSE/LIGHT
MANUFACTURING
OFFICE SPACE
PITTSTON
Main St.
12,000 sq. ft. build-
ing in downtown
location. Ware-
house with light
manufacturing.
Building with some
office space. Entire
building for lease or
will sub-divide.
MLS #10-1074
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
WILKES-BARRE
Lease this free-
standing building for
an AFFORDABLE
monthly rent. Totally
renovated & ready
to occupy. Offices,
conference room,
work stations, kit
and more. Ample
parking and handi-
cap access. $1,750/
month. MLS 11-419
Call Judy Rice
570-714-9230
Wilkes-Barre/
Plains Twp.
WAREHOUSE
Laird St. Complex,
Easy Interstate
access. Lease
132,500 sq. ft.,
12 loading docks,
30 ft. ceilings,
sprinkler, acres
of parking. Offices
available.
570-655-9732,
ext.312
WILKES-BARRE/ SOUTH
Best Lease Any-
where
9,000 sq. ft.
@ $1.00/sq. ft.
&
6,000 sq. ft.
@ $1.25/sq. ft.
Gas heat, overhead
doors, sprinklered.
Can Be Combined
Call Larry at
570-430-1565
947 Garages
KINGSTON
Garage for Rent.
Clean car storage
only, $65/month
Call 570-696-3915
WEST PITTSTON
5 locking garages/
storage units for
rent. 9x11 & 9x14.
$60/month.
Call 570-357-1138
950 Half Doubles
ALDEN / NANTICOKE
Modern, 3 Bed-
rooms, Gas Heat,
Hookups. No Pets.
Group Income,
$500/week helps.
$545 + utilities &
$300 security.
570-824-8786
EDWARDSVILLE
Available immedi-
ately, large EIK, 3
bedrooms, 2nd floor
bath, washer/dryer
hookup, stove &
refrigerator, living
room, dining room,
walk-up attic, no
pets, one year
lease, $600/per
month, plus utilities,
& security deposit.
Call 570-262-1196
EDWARDSVILLE
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD
564 Garfield St.
For lease, available
12/1/11, 3 bedrooms,
1 bath room, refrig-
erator & stove pro-
vided, washer/dryer
hookup, no pets,
fenced yard on cor-
ner lot. $575./per
month, plus utilities,
$575./security
deposit. Call
(570) 542-4904
before 7:00 p.m. to
set an appointment
or email
obuhosky@epix.net.
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
FORTY FORT
1/2 double.
3 bedrooms. Stove,
refrigerator,
dishwasher. Washer
/dryer hookup.
Newly painted.
Off street parking.
$675 + utilities.
570-814-0843
570-696-3090
GLEN LYON
* Renovated Apartment *
3 bedroom. Wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Off street parking.
New furnace. Yard.
Application process
required. Tenant
pays utilities & secu-
rity. $500/mos
570-714-1296
950 Half Doubles
HANOVER TWP.
Completely remod-
eled 2 bedroom, 1
bath, wall to wall
carpet. Stove,
washer/dryer hook
up. Off street park-
ing. $750/month +
first, last & security.
Includes water,
sewer & trash. No
pets. No smoking.
References & credit
check.
570-824-3223
269-519-2634
Leave Message
KINGSTON
Attractive older 1/2
double on residen-
tial one way street.
3 bedroom, bath,
living & dining room
combination.
Kitchen with appli-
ances (new gas
range & dishwash-
er.) 1st floor laundry
hookup. Gas heat.
Attic storage. Heat
utilities & outside
maintenance by
tenant. No pets.
No smoking. 1
month security, 1
year lease. Call
ROSEWOOD REALTY
570-287-6822
KINGSTON
Newly remodled
modeled 2 bed-
room, dining & living
room, off street
parking. All new
appliances. $630/
month + utilities,
security & refer-
ences. Water &
sewer included.
Absolutely No Pets.
Call 570-239-7770
KINGSTON
Two bedrooms,
newly remodeled,
hardwood floors,1
ceramic bath and
kitchen, oak cabi-
nets, refrigerator,
stove and dish-
washer, off-street
parking, no pets, no
smoking. $750/per
month, security &
references.
Call 570-417-4821
PITTSTON
HALF DOUBLE
3 bedrooms, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
heat, hot water, &
garbage included.
No pets. $600/per
month, plus 1
months security de-
posit due at signing.
Call 570-239-4360
PLAINS
3 bedroom half dou-
ble. New flooring &
bathroom. Nice
yard. Appliances
included. $650/mo +
utilities, security &
references. No pets
570-905-7066
PLAINS TWP.
2 bedroom, 1/2
double with eat in
kitchen, including
stove and refrigera-
tor, washer & dryer
hook-up, plenty of
off street parking,
large yard. Sewer
and refuse includ-
ed. Lease, NO PETS
$550 + utilities
570-829-1578
PLYMOUTH
2 bedrooms, 1 bath-
room,washer/dryer
hook-up, enclosed
porch, off-street
parking, no pets,
$475/month + Secu-
rity + utilities.
Call (570) 821-9881
PLYMOUTH
223 Gardner Ave
3 bedroom, kitchen
appliances, yard,
parking, very clean.
$600/month. Call JP
570-592-1606
570-283-9033
PLYMOUTH
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Located on Acade-
my St. $695 + utili-
ties & security.
Small pet OK with
extra security.
Call (570)262-1577
PLYMOUTH
6 room, 3 bedroom.
Laundry hookup.
Stove, fridge, dish-
washer & sewage
included. Section 8
welcome. $625 +
security & utilities.
570-262-0540
WEST PITTSTON
Exeter Ave.
3 bedroom. $650
plus utilities
570-299-5471
WEST PITTSTON
MAINTENANCE FREE!
2 bedroom.
Off street parking.
No smoking. $600
+utilities, security
& last month.
570-885-4206
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
176 Charles St
TOWNHOUSE STYLE, 2
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
Not Section 8
approved. $550/
month + utilities. Ref-
erences & security
required. Available
12/1. 570-301-2785
950 Half Doubles
WILKES-BARRE
Completely remod-
eled, 3 bedroom
half double. Attic
with walk in closet.
Hardwood floors
throughout. Black
marble fireplace.
Sun room. Front &
back porches. Nice
yard. Fridge, stove,
dishwasher includ-
ed. Washer/dryer
hookup. $695 +
security. Tenant
pays all utilities.
A Must See. Call
(570) 824-7251
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
Beautiful, clean 1/2
double in a quiet
neighborhood. 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, full base-
ment, fenced in
yard, 3 porches.
New insulation &
energy efficient win-
dows. Washer/
Dryer hookup, dish-
washer $650 + utili-
ties. 570-592-4133
WYOMING
3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
gas heat, new car-
peting, range & laun-
dry hook ups. Credit
check required.
$750/month + utilities
& security.
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan Group
570-474-6307
953Houses for Rent
BEAR CREEK
3 bedrooms, 2.5
baths. Kitchen/din-
ing, living room, fin-
ished lower level,
deck. Very
private.Surrounded
by over 100 acres
of wooded land
$1000 month plus
utilities.
570-299-5471
DALLAS
GREENBRIAR
Well maintained
ranch style condo
features living room
with cathedral ceil-
ing, oak kitchen,
dining room with
vaulted ceiling, 2
bedrooms and 2 3/4
baths, master bed-
room with walk in
closet. HOA fees
included. $1,200 per
month + utilities.
MLS#11-4063.
Call Kevin Smith
570-696-5422
SMITH HOURIGAN
570-696-1195
DRUMS
SAND SPRINGS GOLF
COMMUNITY
Townhome in Sand
Hollow Village 3
bedroom, 2 1/2
bath, one car
garage conveniently
located near I80/I81
& Rt309.
References, credit
check, security
required
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
deefieldsabroker@gmail.com
FORTY FORT
3 bedrooms, 2 bath,
hardwood floors,
appliances included.
Small sun room.
Garage & yard.
$875/month plus
utilities. No pets.
(570) 287-9631 or
(570) 696-3936
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
2 story home with
beautiful wood
work. 3 bedrooms. 1
bath. Living room,
dining room, den,
modern kitchen.
Gas heat. Small
yard. Private Drive.
$700/month + utili-
ties & security.
Optional 3rd floor
area (2 rooms & full
bath) for additional
$100/month.
Contact Linda at
(570) 696-5418
(570) 696-1195
HARVEYS LAKE
HOME FOR LEASE
Lakefront home,
remolded, FULLY
FURNISHED, lease
for 8-10 months,
$1,500/mo+ utilities.
Call Deb Rosenberg
570-714-9251
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
HARVEYS LAKE
Small 3 bedroom
Victorian home on
large lot. New fur-
nace. 1 block from
Warden Place.
Large yard. Water
included. Credit ref-
erences, $690
month + utilities & 1
month security.
Call 570-714-1296
953Houses for Rent
HAZLETON
THE "TERRACE" SECTION
Located very near
Hazleton Hospital.
Residential home,
Ranch style rental
with garage. $1200
a month includes
heat & utilities con-
veniently located
near I80.
References, credit
check, security
required
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
deefieldsabroker@gmail.com
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Spacious single
family 3 bedroom, 1
bath home. Nice
neighborhood. Flex-
ible lease terms for
flood victims.
Garbage & sewer
by landlord. $685 +
utilities, security &
references. Call
570-885-3590
KINGSTON
Completely remod-
eled Large 2 story, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
single family home
including refrigera-
tor, stove, diswash-
er & disposal. Gas
heat, nice yard,
good neighbor-
hood,. Off street
parking. Shed. No
pets. $995. month.
570-479-6722
LARKSVILLE
Conveniently locat-
ed. Spacious 4 bed-
room single. Gas
heat. Off street
parking. Lease, no
pets. Security. Call
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
MOUNTAIN TOP
Rent to Own - Lease
Option Purchase 5
bedroom 2 bath 3
story older home.
Completely remod-
eled in + out! $1500
month with $500
month applied
toward purchase.
$245K up to 5 yrs.
tj2isok@gmail.com
MOUNTAINTOP
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large eat in
kitchen. Garage.
Huge deck over-
looks woods.
Washer/dryer, dish-
washer, fridge,
sewer & water
included. Credit
check. $1,100 +
security, No pets,
no smoking. Proof
of income required.
Call (570) 709-1288
NANTICOKE
Desirable
Lexington Village
Nanticoke, PA
Many ranch style
homes. 2 bedrooms
2 Free Months With
A 2 Year Lease
$795 + electric
SQUARE FOOT RE
MANAGEMENT
866-873-0478
PITTSTON
ROW HOUSE
FOR RENT
Available Nov. 15, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath
room, all appliances
provided, washer/
dryer on premises,
$600./per month,
plus utilities, $600./
security deposit.
Call 570-881-2101
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PLYMOUTH
417 E. Main St
2 story, 3 bedroom
house for rent. New
Kitchen with stove,
dishwasher, washer
dryer hookup. New
wall to wall carpet.
Small back yard and
deck. $675 + utilities
& security. Call
570-270-3139
POCONOS
Beautiful Chalet.
1,500 sq. ft., 3 bed-
room, 2 bath. Easy
access. Appliances
included. Washer/
Dryer. Stone fire-
place. Great school
district. Hardwood
floors. Available
now. $1,295. Good
credit? 1 month free!
Merry Christmas!
831-206-5758
SHAVERTOWN
Near Burger King
3 bedroom, 1-1/2
bath, 3 season
room, hardwood
floors, off street
parking & gas
heat. 1 year Lease
for $900/month
+ 1 month security.
Garbage, sewer,
refrigerator, stove,
washer/dryer &
gas fireplace
included.
Rent to Own Option Available!
(570) 905-5647
TRUCKSVILLE
2 to 3 bedrooms,
1.5 bathrooms, fully
renovated,
gas/electric heat,
offstreet parking,
washer/dryer
hookup, no pets,
$850/per month,
plus utilities,
security, and lease
required.
Call 570-675-5916
953Houses for Rent
WEST PITTSTON
2 bedroom single
home for rent.
Washer dryer hook-
up. Stove & fridge
included. Call
570-430-3095
WEST PITTSTON
TOWNHOUSE
Available 12/1/11. 2
bedrooms, 1.5 bath-
rooms, wall to wall
carpeting, living/din-
ing combo, refriger-
ator & stove, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
off-street parking,
no pets. Front and
back porches, full
basement. $625/
per month, + utilities
& security deposit.
Call 570-655-8928
WILKES-BARRE
711 N. Washington St.
Recently remodeled
3 bedroom, hard-
wood floors, gas
heat, 1st floor laun-
dry room. Pets
allowed. $750 per
month + utilities.
MLS# 11-2981.
Call Geri
570-696-0888
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedrooms with
lots of storage.
Hardwood floors. 5
minute walk to Gen-
eral Hospital. $670.
+ utilities.
570-814-3838
WILKES-BARRE
NEAR GENERAL
HOSPITAL
Single family, 3 bed-
rooms, new carpet-
ing, large back yard,
on dead end street,
no pets. $700/per
month, plus utilities.
Security & lease.
Credit and back-
ground check.
Call 570-709-7858
WILKES-BARRE
Three 3 Bedrooms
$625, $675, $700
All clean & beautiful.
Tenant pays all utili-
ties. References &
security. No pets.
570-766-1881
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $315.
Efficiency at $435
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
WILKES-BARRE
1 or 2 rooms. Secu-
rity deposit
required, back-
ground check.
$350 and $400.
347-693-4156
965 Roommate
Wanted
ROOMMATE WANT-
ED - Wilkes-Barre.
$275 + 1/2 utilities,
furnished.
570-262-5202
WILKES-BARRE
To share 3 bed-
room apartment. All
utilities included.
$300/month
570-212-8332
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
FLORIDA
Boca Raton
Beautiful 5 room
home with Pool.
Fully furnished. On
canal lot. $600
weekly. If interest-
ed, write to:
120 Wagner St.
Moosic, PA 18507
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
974 Wanted to Rent
Real Estate
HUNTING CABIN
Looking to partici-
pate in hunting
cabin membership
in Luzerne, Lack-
awanna, Wyoming
or Susquehanna
county. Responsible
single adult. Call
570-388-3039 or
570-239-4790
Find the
perfect
friend.
Call 829-7130
to place your ad.
The Classied
section at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL NL NNNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LE LE E LE LE LE E DER DDD .
timesleader.com
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 PAGE 11D
CALL AN EXPERT
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH HVAC
Installation, Service & Repair
Hot air furnaces,
steam/hot water
boilers and hot
water heaters.
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-299-7241
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / repair,
Windows
& Doors
Call the
Building
Industry
Association of
NEPA to find a
qualified mem-
ber for your
next project.
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
ROOFING, SIDING,
DECKS, WINDOWS
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price
25 Yrs. Experience
References. Insured
Free Estimates
570-899-4713
Shedlarski Construction
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Licensed, insured &
PA registered.
Kitchens, baths,
vinyl siding & rail-
ings, replacement
windows & doors,
additions, garages,
all phases of home
renovations.
570-287-4067
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
1039 Chimney
Service
CAVUTO
CHIMNEY
SERVICE
& Gutter Cleaning
Free Estimates
Insured
570-709-2479
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
COZY HEARTH
CHIMNEY
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel Lin-
ing, Parging, Stuc-
co, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
1-888-680-7990
570-840-0873
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
MC GERARD & SONS
10% OFF
All Inside Work!
Basement water
proofing, concrete
floors, parging
foundation walls,
foundation repair
& rebuild, finish
basements.
PROMPT SERVICE
FREE ESTIMATES
QUALITY WORKMANSHIP
www.mcgerard.com
Licensed & Insured
570-941-9122
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-606-7489
570-735-8551
PRICE CONSTRUCTION
Full Service
General Contractor
BASEMENT > ROOFING
> KITCHENS > REMOD-
ELING > BATHROOMS
LJPconstructioninc.com
570-840-3349
1078 Dry Wall
DAUGHERTYS
DRYWALL INC.
Remodeling, New
Construction, Water
& Flood Repairs
570-579-3755
PA043609
MIKE SCIBEK DRYWALL
Hanging & finishing,
design ceilings and
painting. Free esti-
mates. Licensed &
Insured. 328-1230
MIRRA
DRYWALL
Hanging & Finishing
Textured Ceilings
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
(570) 675-3378
Don't need that
Guitar?
Sell it in the
Classified Section!
570-829-7130
1084 Electrical
GRULA ELECTRIC LLC
Licensed, Insured,
No job too small.
570-829-4077
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Service Changes &
Replacements.
Generator Installs.
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
KING GLASS & PAINT
1079 Main St, Swoyersville
Over 50 years experience!
Paints & supplies
for residential &
commercial.
Flooring: Carpet,
Vinyl, Ceramic tile,
Laminate, Hard-
wood and more.
Certified Installa-
tion Crews.
Specials:
Carpet starting at
82/sf
Ceramic &
Laminate starting
at $1.20/sf
Material only
Installation
available
Pittsburgh Interior
Paints: 14-110 Flat
$9.69/gal. 14-510
Semi Gloss
$12.99/gal.
14-310 Eggshell
$12.05/gal.
All materials plus tax
and freight when
applicable.
FREE ESTIMATES.
Store Hours
MONDAY-FRIDAY 7-5
SATURDAY 8-12:30
CLOSED SUNDAY
EVENING APPOINT-
MENTS AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST.
570-288-4639
10% off our
everyday low
prices with
this ad!
We offer additional
discounts to all
Flood Victims.
Excludes specials.
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER 2 GO, INC.
PA#067136- Fully
Licensed & Insured.
We install custom
seamless rain
gutters & leaf
protection systems.
CALL US TODAY ABOUT
OUR 10% OFF WHOLE
HOUSE DISCOUNT!
570-561-2328
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning.
Regulars, storms,
etc. Pressure
washing, decks,
docks, houses,Free
estimates. Insured.
(570) 288-6794
Professional
Window & Gutter
Cleaning
Gutters, carpet,
pressure washing.
Residential/com-
mercial. Ins./bond-
ed. Free est.
570-283-9840
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
1132 Handyman
Services
ALL
MAINTENANCE
WE FIX IT
Electrical,
Plumbing,
Handymen,
Painting
Carpet Repair
& Installation
All Types
Of Repairs
570-814-9365
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of interior & exterior
home repairs.
570-829-5318
FLOOD VICTIMS
FOR
CONSTRUCTION
& DEMOLITION
CALL
LICENSED GENERAL
CONTRACTOR
Plumbing, heating
electrical, painting,
roofs, siding, rough
& finished carpentry
- no job too big or
small. Free Esti-
mates. Call anytime.
570-852-9281
RUSSELLS
Property Maintenance
LICENSED & INSURED
30+ years experi-
ence. Carpentry,
painting & gener-
al home repairs.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-406-3339
SOME ASSEMBLY
REQUIRED
Bought something
or thinking about
buying something
that needs assem-
bly or installation
but dont feel com-
fortable doing it?
Call 570-675-1839
or 570-855-2806.
Pick up & delivery
of item available.
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
A A C L E A N I N G
A1 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-822-4582
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
AAA Bob & Rays
Hauling: Friendly &
Courteous. We take
anything & every-
thing. Attic to base-
ment. Garage, yard,
free estimates. Call
570-655-7458 or
570-905-4820
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
DEMOLITION DEMOLITION
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
M&S HAULING
Clean outs. Metal &
appliances for free.
We do it all - no job
too small! FREE ESTI-
MATES. 570-239-5593
570-592-0504
Mikes $5 & Up
We do cleanups -
basements,
garages, etc. Yard
waste removal &
small deliveries
from Thrift shops,
homes & small
businesses.
SAME DAY SERVICE.
793- 8057 826- 1883
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call John
570-735-3330
1147 Home
Restoration
A-1 REMODELING
ROOFING & SIDING
Garages, Additions,
Windows, Cement
work & Drywall
570-233-7788 or
570-455-5581
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
JOHNS
Landscaping/Hauling
Bobcat:Grading/
Stone. Snow Clearing
Shrub / Tree Trimming
Handyman - All types
7Holiday Lighting 7
& more! 735-1883
Patrick & Deb Patrick & Debs s
Landscaping Landscaping
Landscaping, basic
handy man, clean-
ing, moving & free
salvage pick up.
AVAILABLE FOR
FALL CLEAN UPS!
Call 570-793-4773
RESIDENTIAL & COM-
MERCIAL. BRUSH UP TO
4 HIGH, MOWING, EDG-
ING, MULCHING, TRIM-
MING SHRUBS, HEDGES,
TREES, LAWN CARE,
LEAF REMOVAL, FALL
CLEAN UP. FULLY
INSURED. FREE ESTI-
MATES 829-3261
TOLL FREE
1-855-829-3261
Tree Removal,
Stump Grinding, Haz-
ard Tree Removal,
Grading, drainage,
lot clearing, snow
plowing, stone / soil
delivery. Insured.
Reasonable Rates
570-574-1862
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BDMhel pers. com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
A+ CLASSICAL
All phases.
Complete int/ext
paint &renovations
Since 1990 Since 1990
Free Estimates
Licensed-Insured
570-283-5714
A QUALITY PAINTING
Interior specialist,
residential/commer-
cial. $0 money
down! Pictures &
references avail-
able! 570-328-2072
570-714-2202
JASON SIMMS PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Free Estimates
21 Yrs. Experience
Insured
(570) 947-2777
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
House in Shambles?
We can fix it!
Cover All Painting & Cover All Painting &
General Contracting General Contracting
PA068287. Serving
Northeast PA &
North Jersey since
1989. All phases of
interior & exterior
repair & rebuilding.
Call 570-226-1944 Call 570-226-1944
or 570-470-5716 or 570-470-5716
Free Estimates
And yes, I am a
lead paint removal
certified contractor
JOHNS
PAINTING
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR
RELIABLE, NEAT, HONEST
WORKING WITH PRIDE
INSURED,FREEESTIMATES
570-735-8101
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
1213 Paving &
Excavating
EDWARDS ALL COUNTY
PAVING & SEAL COATING
Modified stone,
laid & compacted.
Hot tar and chips,
dust and erosion
control. Licensed
and
Insured.
Call Today
For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
1228 Plumbing &
Heating
EXPERT PLUMBING,
HEATING & ELECTRICAL
30 years experience
Free Estimates
570-824-1559
NEED FLOOD REPAIRS?
Boilers, Furnaces,
Air. 0% Interest 6
months.
570-736-HVAC
(4822)
1249 Remodeling &
Repairs
HOSIE HOSIE
CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION
Free estimates,
interior and exterior
design. Licensed
and ins. No job too
big or small. Dry-
wall, siding & more
570-540-6597
1252 Roofing &
Siding
FALL
ROOFING
Special $1.29 s/f
Licensed, insured,
fast service
570-735-0846
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
*24 Hour Emer-
gency Calls*
PLACE
YOUR
OWN
CLASSIFIED
AD
ONLINE!
ITS FAST AND EASY!
PLUS, YOUR AD WILL
RUN FREE FOR ITEMS
PRICED UNDER $1000.
GO TO CLASSIFIED ADS
AND CLICK ON
PLACE YOUR AD.
Our online system will let you place
Announcements, Automotive Listings,
Merchandise, Pets & Animals, Real
Estate and Garage Sales.
Customize the way your ad looks
and then nd it in the next days
edition of The Times Leader, in our
weekly newspapers and online at
timesleader.com.
NUMBER
ONE
AUDITED
NEWSPAPER
IN LUZERNE COUNTY
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS (ABC)
*Your ad will appear in the next days paper if placed online
before 4 p.m. Mon. through Thurs. Place on Friday before
1 p.m. for Saturdays paper and before 4 p.m.
Our online system will let you place
Announcements, Automotive Listings, gg
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All the football coverage delivered to your door.
Call 829-5000
Ask for code: FOOTBALL
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Friday &Saturday High School Coverage
Saturday &Sunday College Coverage
Sunday &Monday NFL Coverage
F
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F U N N I E S TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
STONE SOUP
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
THATABABY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
CLOSE TO HOME
ARGYLE SWEATER
B.C.
PICKLES
PARDON MY PLANET
MARMADUKE HERMAN
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
TUNDRA

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